17
Sep

Communication alone does not cause change

Some people are not going to be happy to read this.

'Communication Can Cause Change' is the name of this article. The sign behind the participants in the photo and the name of the project are different. They are: 'Communication Causes Change'.

The fact is that communication alone cannot and does not change anything. Breath or ink or pixels are spent. That is the only change that occurs. In all social science theories of change, communication alone is not sufficient to cause change. Both the title of the article and the project name make me wonder whether APCOM knows much about change.

Jamie

++++++++++++++++++

Communication CAN Cause Change

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday 16th September 2013, Bangkok, Thailand. The Asia Pacific Coalition on Male Sexual Health (APCOM) conducts a 5-day training workshop between 9th and 13th September 2013 with emerging young gay, men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender advocates across Asia focusing on communications and social media.

APCOM’s Communication Causes Change (CCC) Project, funded by the Robert Carr Civil Society Network Fund (RCNF), selected 15 participants under 30 years of age out of over 150 applications received from the MSM, gay and transgender community to impart experiences and knowledge in working with the mainstream media, social media and to increase the communications structures within regional and national level networks.

“We are thankful to the Robert Carr Civil Society Network Fund for supporting APCOM to provide the opportunity for these young people to learn, return home and communicate the great work being done in their community and country,” said Midnight Poonkasetwattana, Executive Director of APCOM. “We have an exceptional group of young people who surpassed our expectations. They will be great advocates in the future.”

The pilot training programme, which APCOM hope to replicate in the future, involved bringing experts in their respective fields to share knowledge and experience of media and communications with this group of emerging advocates.  Facilitators of the training were representatives of key organisations for the MSM and transgender community, including Asia Pacific Network of People Living with HIV (APN+), Asia Pacific Transgender Network (APTN), Youth Voices Count (YVC), UNAIDS Regional Support Team - Asia Pacific, the Being LGBT in Asia project supported by USAID and UNDP, and the HIV and AIDS Data Hub for Asia-Pacific.

The participants have strong connections to the MSM and transgender communities in their respective countries, and for some it was their first time to travel out of their country. These young delegates were from China, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

According to Sibi Mathen, a 27-year-old participant who represents Yaariyan, an LGBT youth group in Mumbai, India, “My interactions with my fellow participants have been the most fruitful. I have realised that despite being spread across the continent and the having different cultures, as LGBT persons, we share a lot of commonalities, and together by forging a strong network we can all help each other immensely.”

"I am very proud to be selected as a candidate of this workshop, the workshop was very useful and very informative. I believe that this project will help the MSM, transgender & PLHIV community in the region come together and further empower the voice of the minority groups in the region, looking towards a future that includes equality and acceptance," said Bùi M?nh Ti?n (Juno),  21-year-old participant, from Vietnam.

The second pilot training workshop for the Pacific will be held in Auckland, New Zealand between 7th-11th October.  This will be facilitated in partnership with the Pacific Sexual Diversity Network (PSDN), APCOM’s coalition partner in the Pacific.

For more information on APCOM, please visit our website www.apcom.org

Why not stay up to date via our social media pages??

Like us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/apcom.org?

Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/apcom

Media contact:?

Matthew Vaughan?

Communications and Advocacy Officer?

matthewv@apcom.org?

Bangkok, Thailand +66 86 360 5062 (mobile)
- See more at: http://www.apcom.org/communication-can-cause-change#sthash.SYRMQDWv.dpuf

http://www.apcom.org/communication-can-cause-change

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