Journ-AIDS - South Africa
- encourage and enable journalists to play an informed role in combating HIV/AIDS
- promote discussion and debate among journalists, editors, health professionals and other key roleplayers in this area
- provide high-quality academic research, which is designed to ensure an informed and useful debate around this issue
- monitor the role and the impact of the media.
Journ-AIDS draws on research, face-to-face training, and information and communication technologies (ICTs). Its primary activities include:
- offering 4-6 month fellowships to working journalists to undertake longer-term and in-depth research and writing outside of the newsroom. The writing that results from these fellowships is published in a wide range of media and peer-reviewed journals.
- identifying and researching gaps in reporting. Previous and current projects have focused on media coverage and audience reception of HIV/AIDS news texts, the role of stigma and gender in prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT), the strengths and vulnerabilities of HIV-positive children, and the role of traditional health practitioners in the mainstream treatment of their patients.
- operating Journ-AIDS website, which is an online resource for journalists as well as students of public health communication/journalism in South Africa; it features some of the following:
- News articles from South Africa and internationally relevant articles on HIV/AIDS
- Factsheets that provide information on a topic and explore how the topic is being dealt with in the South African context
- HIV/AIDS policy documents
- Tools for Journalists - these are practical tools for journalists to report on HIV. They include a comprehensive listing of HIV/AIDS-related terms and details on research undertaken on media reporting around HIV/AIDS
- Contacts and projects database, which are searchable by organisation and thematic area
- An electronic media distribution list that disseminates alerts or analysis on topical issues to the media
- running wider discussion forums on HIV/AIDS and the media to stimulate debate and discussion amongst journalists, editors, activists, doctors, scientists, academics, government and other stakeholders.
- offering training for graduate and working journalists in HIV/AIDS reporting.
- producing ongoing research, resources and publications.
- partnering with a number of organisations such as the Nelson Mandela Foundation, SA National Editors’ Forum, NSJ, CADRE, the Media Monitoring Project and the Children’s Institute in areas such as discussion forums, research and analysis of media content.
HIV/AIDS, Technology.
The project is based on research undertaken by CADRE from 2000 to 2002 on media reporting on HIV/AIDS.
The project is jointly managed by the Perinatal HIV Research Unit and the Journalism and Media Studies Programme at the University of the Witwatersrand, and supported by the Health Communication Partnership based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Centre for Communication Programs and the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS relief through the United States Agency for International Development.
Email sent from Richard Delate to The Communication Initiative on March 14 2003; and Journ-AIDS website.
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