PANOS-GKP JOURNALISM AWARDS 2004

TRANSPARENCY, GOOD GOVERNANCE AND DEMOCRACY: DO ICTs INCREASE
ACCOUNTABILITY?

Panos and GKP are pleased to call for submissions for the 2004
"Reporting on the Information Society" awards. The topic for this year
is "Transparency, good governance and democracy: Do Information and
Communication Technologies increase accountability?"

Four awards of $1,000 each will be made for the best journalism on this
topic produced by journalists in developing and transition countries.

These awards, which were launched by Panos and GKP in 2003, aim to
encourage and bring to international recognition thoughtful and incisive
reporting that goes beyond describing information projects or new
investment initiatives to analyse their social and political impacts and
policy implications.

Print, radio, TV and web journalism are all eligible.

To submit a piece of work for consideration, send a clipping, audio or
video tape, transcript or web reference by email to
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or by post to: Murali Shanmugavelan, Panos
Institute, 9 White Lion St, London N1 9PD, UK

The work submitted must have been published/broadcast between 1 January
and 15 October 2004.

Deadline for submissions: 15 October 2004.

******************************************
This year's theme:

TRANSPARENCY, GOOD GOVERNANCE AND DEMOCRACY: DO ICTs INCREASE
ACCOUNTABILITY?

It is generally accepted by governments, communication specialists and
the development community that information and communication are
essential for development. The World Summit on the Information Society
(2003), for example, was convened "to harness the potential of
information and communication technology to promote the development
goals of the Millennium Declaration".

Among the most important ways information and communication technologies
(ICTs) can contribute to development are considered to be encouraging
information openness, speeding up processes of exchange of information,
and reducing opportunities for corruption. Good governance, said the
United Nations Human Development Report in 2001, depends on effective
information systems, and is crucial to achieving the Millennium
Development Goals.

ICTs may contribute to good governance in different ways. There are many
formal "e-governance" projects, such as digitising land records or
voting procedures, which aim to facilitate citizens' access to
officialdom and reduce opportunities for corruption. Citizens may gain
new opportunities for engaging in political processes, or for holding
public and commercial bodies accountable. On a more general level,
internet and email may facilitate civil society networking and action.
More broadly still, there is a global movement for freedom of
information, and many governments and businesses are having to redefine
their policies on transparency.

But ICTs alone may not be enough to end deep-rooted habits or political
cultures of excluding citizens from access to information. In some
countries, governments are proving resistant to change, or projects to
improve access to information are reaching fewer people than expected.

These are important issues for journalists to investigate and analyse.

Panos and GKP invite journalists from developing and transition
countries to submit work that has been or will be published this year in
their own country or internationally, on aspects of communication,
transparency and good governance. The work may focus on the role of any
technology-assisted communication medium - internet and web, telephones,
press, radio or TV.  It can be any form of journalism and in any medium.

  
ABOUT US:

Panos London is an NGO which exists to stimulate debate on global
development issues, including media and communication issues. Panos
works with journalists in developing countries to produce news, features
and analysis about the most critical global issues of today. Panos
London is part of a network of Panos offices in fifteen countries.

The Global Knowledge Partnership (GKP) is a worldwide network of
organizations committed to harnessing the potentials of information and
communication technologies (ICT) for sustainable development.  GKP is
the world's first multi-stakeholder ICT for Development (ICT4D)
partnership at the global level, with members comprising governments,
donor agencies, private sector companies, civil society, networks and
international institutions.

SUBMISSION CRITERIA AND INSTRUCTIONS 

*       Only journalists who are citizens of or living in developing or
transition countries may apply.
*       The work submitted can be a piece of print, radio, TV or online
journalism.
*       A journalist can submit as many pieces as s/he likes.
*       Types of print/web article that will be considered include news
reports, features, analysis, interviews, opinion/think pieces, and
editorials. Broadcast pieces can also include debates and phone-in
programmes.
*       There is no maximum or minimum length 
*       Submitted works should be stories or features relating to the
question of whether or how information and communication contribute
to transparency, good governance, democracy and accountability. The story
can focus on any technology-assisted communication medium, but it will
extend beyond merely reporting an event to analysing its significance in
the light of the wider development issues and the concept of the
information society.
*       We are interested in stories that take account of gender aspects.
*       The work must have been published or broadcast between January 1st
and October 15th 2004 (or publication/broadcast must be confirmed to
take place before October 15th 2004) and you must provide evidence of
this    - a newspaper clipping, web reference or broadcasting schedule
(or details of broadcasting - station, time, date, name of programme).
*       Video material should be submitted in PAL format. Audio material
can be submitted on cassette, or as MP3 files.
*       Print or online submissions can be in English, French, Spanish or
Portuguese. Radio or audio-visual submissions in languages other than
English must be accompanied by a full transcript in English.

Please give the following information with your submission:

Name
Sex
Employment (eg "Business reporter with the Zambia Daily News") 
Postal address
Email address
Telephone number  

Your covering letter (in English, French, Spanish or Portuguese) should
give some information about the medium in which your submission was
published eg national or local newspaper, national or community radio.

If your submission was originally in a non-European language, please
state what language it is in, and give some information about the status
and users of this language (eg "It is the language of the xx people, who
live in xxxx. This language is not the main language of the state, but
there is one newspaper and two radio stations that use it.")
Please indicate briefly some other stories about communication issues
that you would like to research and report on, for which you might use
the award if you received it.
Reports that were commissioned by Panos are not eligible for this award.

Panos will auto-acknowledge email entry/ies from each contestant. If you
do not receive one within 48 hours, please send your entries again.

SELECTION CRITERIA 

We will seek to make one award to a journalist from Africa, one to a
journalist from Asia and one from another region; we will seek to award
at least one to a woman journalist.

We are looking for journalism that builds understanding of the
importance of communication for development; and that stimulates
awareness of the impact of national and global communication policies on
development.

FOR MORE ABOUT THE AWARDS AND PANOS VISIT:
<http://www.panos.org.uk/global/Rprojectdetails.asp?ProjectID=1045&ID=1002&;
RP
rojectID=1061>



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