From On Air - Fall 2003
The Nairobi Declaration - June 6, 2003
The countries of Africa are bound together by the urgent
and unique challenges of the twenty-first century. Africans
must stop the HIV/AIDS pandemic without forgetting the humanity
of those infected and affected by HIV/ AIDS. Africans must
make reproductive health information and services available
to all, while remembering that their use must be voluntary.
Africans must achieve social and political development grounded
in our unique and diverse cultures.
We are uncompromisingly optimistic about the future of Africa
and its people in all their diversity and the vital role issue-based
entertainment (commonly referred to as entertainment-education,
enter-educate, and edutainment) must play in meeting these
challenges. Our optimism is grounded in the 20 years of demonstrated
success with issue-based entertainment in many countries throughout
the continent. Twenty years of experience has created a skilled
and diverse pool of writers, actors, producers, and researchers
who are already engaged in making a better Africa. Twenty
years of demonstrated success has created a pool of financial
supporters, government agencies, and non-governmental agencies
that are committed to providing the resources, support and
the structure to enable our work. There is impressive work
on environment, health, rights, and poverty alleviation being
undertaken through various media strategies. We believe that
more can be achieved.
Our vision for the next 20 years is to build on this past
success by spreading the issue-based entertainment methodology
to all countries in Africa. We, the issue-based entertainment
community, meeting at the 2003 Nairobi Soap Summit on Making
Entertainment Useful, June 3 to 7, 2003, commit ourselves
to the advancement of issue-based entertainment on the continent
of Africa and globally.
Our commitment includes the following
positions and actionable steps:
- To use proven issue-based entertainment methodologies
of production and implementation;
- To use the creative energies of our artists to serve
our educational goals;
- To make the educational issues of our programs relevant
and accessible to all populations;
- To make our programs as entertaining as possible so that
they will draw the largest possible audience without compromising
the ethical frameworks that guide our programs;
- To build our programs on the oral traditions of African
culture;
- To respect the cultures of all our audiences;
- To understand that the process of behavior change is
slow and that our commitment must be sustained over time;
- To adhere to the highest standards of program production
possible;
- To remain connected to our colleagues worldwide for a
continuous exchange of ideas;
- To build the capacity of our writers, actors, producers
and researchers so that the pool of talent will grow and
improve;
- To explore the use of various media and to use multiple
media to reinforce our educational themes and reach the
largest possible audience;
- To collaborate with academic scholars in communication
and public health so that our interventions will be studied
and disseminated;
- To create lasting networks and professional institutions
engaged in issue-based education for sustainability;
- To collaborate with our colleagues regionally to share
our successes and our experiences;
- To reach out to the owners of the media to provide the
idea that social and commercial interests can both be met
through issue-based entertainment;
- To develop and study the use of grassroots and alternative
broadcast methodologies (community radio, short wave and
digital rebroadcast platforms);
- To collaborate with cultural, social, and political icons
and opinion leaders to disseminate information for social
change;
- To generate local resources as a strategy to achieving
sustainability;
- To call upon the donor community to work as equal partners
in generating an agenda for issue-based entertainment programs,
striking a balance between donor interests, audience needs,
and creative outputs;
- To document and disseminate the processes and best practices
of practitioners within the continent;
- To advocate the use of issue-based entertainment and
related communication strategies as an integral part of
global health strategies at the local, national and international
levels.
Next Actionable Steps:
- We call for hosting an entertainment-education soap summit
at least once every two years on the African continent to
share experiences and best practices, to foster networking
and collaborations, and to generate advocacy for issue-based
entertainment among donors, media production houses, governments
and the general public.
- We call for instituting a set of awards to recognize
African excellence in issue-based entertainment production
and implementation. Guidelines for the open competition,
award categorizes, and the selection process will be developed
by a small consultative group.
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