Media Professionals Training

Submitted by system admin on

IOM helps in building the capacities of media professionals and students to implement good standards in their reporting of migration issues. One example of this is IOM's project 'Migrants in the Spotlight: Training and Capacity Building for Media', which included training seminars in 2011 for journalists and media students from the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia to raise awareness about reporting on migration issues.

Ethical code for journalists

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Journalists’ Union of Macedonia and Thrace Daily Newspapers in Greece has drafted a proposal for the adoption of the Anti-racism Ethics Code of the Greek journalists called The Charter of Idomeni, in the name of the border control village which thousands of refugees pass through to reach Northern European countries.

Reporting fairly on labour migration

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

All too frequently, xenophobia against migrant workers is fuelled by populist attitudes that are divorced from the reality on the ground. Wittingly or unwittingly, media can play its part in creating an unbalanced discourse about migration, including labour migration. To mark International Migrants Day on December 18, 2015, the ILO aunched the “Reporting Fairly on Labour Migration” global media competition to recognize exemplary media coverage and fair reporting on the issue.

Harmony Week

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Harmony Week is held every year on the week of the 21 March to coincide with the United Nations International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and celebrate Australia's cultural diversity.

The message of Harmony Day is that everyone belongs - it is a day of cultural respect for everyone who calls Australia home. 

Between 1999 and 2020, more than 80,000 Harmony Week events had been held in childcare centres, schools, community groups, churches, businesses and federal, state and local government agencies across Australia.

 

Civil Society "Stockholm Agenda" on migrant and migration-related goals and targets

Submitted by Ms. Laurence BRON on

On June 19, 2014 a civil society agenda on the inclusion of migrants and migration in the post-2015 development framework was launched by the International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC) in partnership with civil society networks Global Coalition on Migration, NGO Committee on Migration New York, and MADE, with the endorsement of over 100 additional organizations.



Media, Immigration and Diversity

Submitted by Ms. Laurence BRON on

Starting in 2010, this seminar series have attracted more than 300 participants around Portugal. The objectives of the program include promoting diversity on the media, improving the theme of immigration in research and media production and promoting the values of intercultural diversity and integration of migrant communities.

Migrant Voices

Submitted by Ms. Laurence BRON on

Eight stories about the experience of migrants in Greece were broadcast on TV100, a TV channel serving northern Greece, following a TV & radio production training course on migration and diversity, organised jointly by the Media Diversity Institute and Symβiosis, in partnership with TV100 in 2012.

Face2face: facilitating dialogue between migrants and European citizens (F2F)

Submitted by Ms. Laurence BRON on

The project aims to break down negative stereotypes and improve public perception of migrants and the phenomenon of migration in the Czech Republic, United Kingdom, Italy and Spain by creating strong and long-lasting basis for interaction and dialogue between migrants and members of receiving communities. Since a large part of the project will take place in 2013, the European Year of Citizenship, the project seeks to bring attention to the wider definition of citizen, meaning a person who is linked to a country by rights, but also by responsibility to the society. 

Subscribe to Objective 17: Eliminate all forms of discrimination and promote evidence-based public discourse to shape perceptions of migration