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The following is an excerpt of a story produced by DAWNS grant winner Regina Ziwoh. Read the full article here.

‘I never went to school, however, if to be educated mean to bring change, then I am very educated’ says Mama Pekokeh Mary a.k.a Peaceful Pekokeh, age 90+, a WWSF award winner for sustainable development and creativity in rural life,a community mobilizer, and founder of NJANG FARMERS common initiative group.

The story of Mama Pekokeh is one of those rare rural voices, whose works have transformed rural farming as well improved the living condition of many rural farmers in her community.

Born around the 20s, in Nbashie, in Bafanji northwest region of Cameroon to father; Mbimoh Honfu, a farmer and traditional fence marker, and mother, Ngwiepieb Monica, a fulltime farmer; Mama Pekokeh has lived all her life as a farmer.

“I have farmed all my life” she says,“I was born a famer. My parents farmed for living. Then, I got married to a Farmer with whom we farmed until death took him away from me, some three to four decades ago. Now I am old, I am still a farmer. My children, grand and great grandchildren also make livings from farming.”

Inspired by the association WICO, a grassroots northwest-based Women’s Information and Co-operation network which aims at improving the socioeconomic situation of women by providing them with small grants (microcredit), as well as supporting and/or facilitating the creation of women’s groups, Mama Pekokeh created the NJANG FARMERS common initiative group. A childhood dream Mama Pekokeh finally realized in her late sixties and early seventies.

Growing up, Mama Pekokeh says, “I have suffered so much. I saw my parents laboured so hard, spent most time in the farm. I knew one day, things will change. And farmers will have time to engage in community affairs like others.”

NJANG was the first collective farmers group in Bafanji;she says, formed within the 90s and was legally registered in 1994 as a Common Initiative Group (CIG) for Bafanji Farmers.

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We are thrilled to announce that Regina Zoneziwoh from Cameroon and Shanoor Seervai from India have each won $1,000 in our humanitarian reporting contest.

Regina’s project, ‘know herStory,’ will narrate 15 personal and unique stories of grassroots women leaders involved in community mobilization, HIV/AIDS, peace building, social justice, and human rights advocacy in Cameroon. Shanoor will document the lives of sexworkers in Mumbai, India to tell the stories of their lives with a particular focus on the relationships the women have with their children.

Our mission at DAWNS is support compelling storytelling about issues that do not always make the mainstream news, but are of vital global importance. Our ultimate goal is to fund many, many projects like Regina’s and Shanoor’s.

To do that we need you.

Funding for these grants comes from Global Citizen and through subscription sales to our global news curation service, DAWNS Digest. If you are not yet a subscriber, we encourage you to try out DAWNS Digest for free. We hand craft a daily summary of the most important development, human rights, and humanitarian news from the developing world. If you are a news junkie you will most certainly appreciate our service! It is free to try for the first month, then we charge $2.99/month. And, as you know, we use our revenue to support great storytellers like Regina and Shanoor.

Give it a whirl. In the meantime, here are the two projects our subscription sales are supporting.

 

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DAWNS is committed to support aid, development and humanitarian reporting. Your paid subscriptions fund this work.

From today until March 7, we are running a competition between 12 finalists for two $1,000 storytelling grants. Our partners in this contest is Global Citizen, an advocacy group determined to end extreme global poverty. Global Citizen is hosting the voting platform for the contest and is contributing to the grant program.

Here are the 12 finalists. Read through them and click on the one that you like. Then selection the ‘petition’ option at the end of the page to vote.

Seema Mathur

My project encompasses combating present-day violence against women as well as reconciling and healing from the wounds of conflict in Liberia. Women were systematically raped during Liberia’s 14 years of civil war. Today rape is among the highest crimes in the country. In January I will have the opportunity to shoot and interview four female Nobel Peace Prize winners who are traveling to Liberia. These women will be helping to empower individuals that are seeking solutions to violence against women.

Jainaiba Nyang-Njie

Poverty in Gambia is said to have a gendered face, with women forming the majority of the poor in both rural and urban households. Data obtained from government sources (SPA II 1998), indicate that 64 percent of those in agriculture are either extremely poor (47 percent), or poor (17 percent).

Regina Zoneziwoh

‘know herStory’ is a 3 to 6 month project that will narrate 15 personal and unique stories of grassroots women leaders involved in community mobilization, HIV/AIDs, peace building, social justice, and human rights advocacy.

Nosarieme Garrick

My Africa Is – an interactive documentary series that identifies innovations on the African continent from the youth. The series will follow unexpected developments in the humanitarian, music, fashion, film, arts, and business sectors of the continent, using each African city as a backdrop to showcase diversity.

Arthur Nazaryan

‘Through the Fire’ is a documentary film project that shows a side of Somalia beyond the all-too-familiar news reports of piracy, war, and famine. It gives an intimate portrait of the life and work of three exceptional Somali women, who, in the midst of two decades of bitter civil war, have risen up to rebuild their shattered nation.

Shanoor Seervai

My project documents the lives of sex workers and their children in Falkland Road, one of the largest red light districts in Mumbai, India. The purpose of the project is to listen to and record the daily challenges these women and children face without sensationalizing or victimizing them. I intend to spend time with them in the brothels where they live and work, talking about the issues that matter most to them.

Dean Moull

Whilst volunteering in Kenya three years ago I encountered a group of IDPs, Kenyans displaced by the post-election violence of 2007-08. After returning to the UK I wrote a book about the community I had been living with but remained haunted by the stories I heard from the IDPs who’d been forced from their houses, some of whom endured unspeakable violence.

David Joseph Weddi

Over 5,000 farmers in Doho Rice scheme, Uganda, have spent more than a year waiting to restart cultivating their rice paddies. The construction of a dam over the river that supplies water to these farmers has caused this problem and has had terrible effects on the population. The community has seen a rise in thuggery, theft, robbery and murder as people struggle to survive amidst no harvest. The farmers and their families are greatly suffering and this has negatively impacted local schools. Parents are failing to send their children to class because they lack the money needed to pay the school fees.

Sharron Ward

In Hindu culture, boys represent a status symbol. Many regard girls as a financial drain because parents face the pressure of providing a dowry to marry them off. The low status of women results not only in the abortion of female fetuses, but also the abandonment of baby girls, the neglect and abuse of women in “dowry deaths,” “honour killings,” and even burning widows to death in a ritual called sati.

Jessie Dendere

The project I intend to work on is based on water shortages and challenges being experienced by villagers. This story should be told because water is vital and a basic human right. It would be very important to find out how the people in these villages are getting by without water. These areas remain underdeveloped because teachers and nurses refuse to be deployed to them due to the water problems. In addition some schools and health institutions run without water.

Kate Lord

Eighteen-year-old Maheshwari comes from a family of quarry workers in rural India, none of whom completed schooling past the eighth grade. For the first four years of Maheshwari’s life, it seemed she would follow a similar path: Waking at 5 a.m. to start the household chores, marrying young, bearing children, and bringing in money through odd jobs wherever she could. Instead, she was selected by the Shanti Bhavan Children’s Project to attend their boarding school, a brush with fate that would change the trajectory of her entire life.

Paolo Patruno

“Birth is a dream” is the name of my photography project, which aims to document and raise awareness of the maternity crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa. I started documenting the maternal health crisis in Malawi in 2011, and in DRC and Uganda in 2012.

DAWNS is a mission-driven enterprise to help lower the barriers to compelling humanitarian storytelling. Since launching our service a year ago we have given away three storytelling grants, totaling $1,500.  We are accepting applications for two $1,000 humanitarian reporting and storytelling grants. DAWNS is partnering with Global Citizen which is helping fund this project. Selecting the grantees will community supported effort.

Call for Applications:

Global Citizen and the Development and Aid World News Service are announcing a new round of microgrants. We will give away two $1,000 grants to reporters, bloggers, photographers film makers or anyone with a compelling humanitarian story to tell.

Who Should Apply:

Our grants are open to anyone, anywhere in the word. Our ideal grantees have excellent story ideas or projects underway, but need a small modicum of financial support to help them in some tangible way. (Here is a list of previous grantees.) If you need a new camera lens; some help to pay for a translator; some financial assistance to pay for travel related to your project, then you should apply. Your project should already be off the ground, or close to it. You need to demonstrate to us how $1000 can be put to productive use.

Who Should Not Apply:

This is strictly a storytelling grant. We are here to help people tell local stories of global significance. Unfortunately, that means that we will not fund aid projects. If you are an NGO looking for support to build a school or something like that, you should not apply.

Selection Process:

Giving away this grant will be a community driven effort. The team at DAWNS and Global Citizen will narrow down the applicants to a group of about 10 exceptional finalists. If you are one of the 10 finalists, your application will then be posted to Global Citizen’s website and our community will select the two winners through a competitive voting process.

Who We Are:

Global Citizen is a tool to amplify and unite a generation’s call for justice. It’s a place for you to learn, and act, to bring an end to extreme poverty. Global Citizens know that a world that deprives 1.3 billion people of their basic rights and opportunities is unjust and unacceptable. We celebrate the efforts made to cut extreme poverty by half, but recognize more still needs to be done. Global Citizen is powered by the Global Poverty Project. We’re a not-for-profit organization whose vision is much like yours: to live in a world without extreme poverty. Learn more at http://www.globalcitizen.org

The Development and Aid World News Service (DAWNS) is a media platform for people interested in global news. Our flagship product is the DAWNS Digest, a hand-curated subscription-based daily news clipping service and mobile app that delivers an easy to read snapshot of the day’s global humanitarian news. We aim to firmly establish DAWNS as a platform to support journalism for the humanitarian community. With revenue generated through subscriptions to DAWNS Digest we have started a micro-grant program to support reporting and storytelling on global humanitarian issues. Learn more at http://dawnsdigest.com

Timeline (subject to change)

January 7: Applications Open

January 25: Applications Close

February 5: Finalists Announced. Voting Begins

February 27: Voting Closes

February 28: Grants Awarded
How to Apply:

Fill out the application below or go here. Our application is intended to be very easy and accessible. If you have any questions, please email us at DAWNSDigest@gmail.com

The following post is by Jennifer Lentfer originally appeared on the How Matters blog and is cross-posted with the blog’s permission.

I use my How Matters YouTube channel to highlight portrayals of international assistance that inspire more nuanced conversations about the politics of global development and international aid. Frankly though, there’s not enough content to keep that page very active. Very few video-based products show people grappling with the realities of programming on the ground and the stories of grassroots change-makers too often remain overlooked.

The Social Impact Media Awards, organized by DEEDA Productions, seeks to change all that. See below their call for submissions for their juried 2013 awards.

Filmmakers and do-gooders, show us how aid really works!

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Social Impact Media Awards 2013 Call for Submissions

The Social Impact Media Awards (SIMA 2013) is an international documentary and video competition honoring members in the independent film and global humanitarian industry. The competition’s objective is to champion and promote the stories of grassroots change-makers that too often remain overlooked, and to provide a springboard for creative and educational media that exemplifies excellence in its potential to inspire change.

What SIMA 2013 is looking for:

(1) INDEPENDENT DOCUMENTARY FILMS (FEATURES & SHORTS)

SIMA 2013 is looking for original, wise, brave and creative productions that will increase the awareness of viewers to global injustices, to the resilience of humans facing depravation, to the politics of international aid, and to the efforts and agents of change in developing nations. SIMA will celebrate the work of filmmakers that raise important questions and inspire people to reflect on the meaning and potential of help for those in need.

SIMA 2013 is especially interested in:

  1. Everyday stories of individuals or groups living in developing countries
  2. Campaigning films geared to raising awareness and calls to action
  3. Issues relating to the U.N. Millennium Development Goals
  4. Transparency and sustainability in the humanitarian/human rights/global development sector
  5. Examples of help brought by individuals, local heroes, donors, international organizations, governmental agencies and NGOs – both positive and those who have not been successful.

(2) EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS

NGOs, foundations, local grassroots organizations, and community activists from all over the world are invited to submit their videos and compete for recognition of the process behind their development work.

SIMA 2013 is looking for videos that share unique insight into “HOW AID WORKS”. Videos should highlight distinctive approaches, creative models, successful tactics, and innovations. Videos capturing effective development approaches and how-to stories can be between 3-15 min long and should emphasize processes used, failures along the way, and impact measures and stories.

Submission and Deadlines:

To submit and upload your film, see:
URL: www.socialimpactmediaawards.com

Submissions open: Dec 4, 2012
Regular deadline: Jan 15, 2013
Late deadline: Feb 15, 2013

Awards:

Through the championing of selected productions we would like to assist filmmakers and activists in bringing international audiences closer to their work. DOCUMENTARY FILMS will be judged on their creative potential to inspire action and ignite a deeper understanding of how global issues affect the everyday lives of people around the world. EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS will be judged on their potential to communicate and contribute to innovation and best practices in humanitarian aid and development.

SIMA 2013 will honor accomplishments in the following categories: Best Documentary, Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Best Sound Editing. Our judging team consists of media experts and aid professional that will select the best documentaries and educational videos for each award category. Winners of Special Jury Awards will receive cash prizes per each category.

Winners and nominees will receive placement on the SIMA homepage and affiliated media outlets. They will also be used in SIMA’s educational and humanitarian distribution network, which facilitates worldwide screenings of documentary films for community groups and aid organizations to encourage local community activism.

Organizer:

SIMA organizer, DEEDA Productions, is an award winning documentary production company, specializing in the global development sector since 2005. DEEDA’s documentaries and advocacy campaigns engage global communities of young professionals, students, consumers, artists and change-makers through dialogue and socially-conscious initiatives.

To learn more, email: SIMA@DEEDAPRODUCTIONS.COM

We have a new mobile app. We think this app can lay the groundwork for a sustainable and revolutionary new model for supporting global humanitarian journalism.

Here’s why.

We started DAWNS Digest on a hunch that a community of global news consumers could be nurtured, inspired and empowered to support compelling global humanitarian journalism. Our idea was pretty simple: We sell subscriptions to a global humanitarian news aggregation service to people who value easy access to that kind of news, then use our revenue to support nuanced international reporting and storytelling that this community craves.

We are one year into this experiment and we think we are onto something. So far, major international NGOs and government agencies, students, and the general news consuming public have signed up for an email version of our aggregation service. Through a competitive voting process, these subscribers helped chose three very interesting international reporting projects to support over the past year.

With the launch of our new mobile app, we think we can take this model to the next level. You can learn about all the great features of our mobile here, but the reasoning behind it is what I want to emphasize. We think 1) There are a few thousand people out there who would pay a couple dollars a month to receive timely updates on parts of the world the mainstream media tends to ignore. 2) This community has a rooting interest to help journalists, photographers, and online media tell local stories of global significance.

Over the past year, we have found that this process helps develop a community, ensures that audiences can access stories of interest to them, and provides journalists with the chance to pursue stories that might otherwise not be told.

We have not yet reached our few thousand subscriber threshold, but with or new app we think we can. If we succeed, we would be pioneering a sustainable financial model to support global development and international human rights reporting.

That’s our gamble. And that’s why we are launching DAWNS Digest mobile.  Join us.

Great news!  Our humanitarian reporting grantees have won the prestigious Sidney Award from the Sydney Hillman Foundation for their work investigating a mysterious kidney illness afflicting agrarian communities in Latin America and Asia. Their report, Mystery in the Fields, is a photographic essay and hard-nosed investigation of something called CKDu, which stands for Chronic Kidney Disease of Unspecified Origin. More than 16,000 men have died from CKDu between 2005 and 2009, but it has been way off the public radar…until the Center for Public Integrity decided to investigate.

We came to support this project because one of the three lead journalists, the photographer Anna Marie Barry-Jester, is a subscriber to our daily email news clips service, DAWNS Digest.  In April this year, she tipped us off to the launch of a Kickstarter campaign to fund the costs of reporting this story. We thought this was a fascinating story that fits directly in our mission of supporting under-reported humanitarian stories of global significance. We also loved the idea of supporting one of our own community members in her project, so we contributed $500 into the Kickstarter.

At the time, this amounted to about one third of what we had in the bank. Needless to say, it was a great investment!

*For those new to DAWNS Digest: we are a news clips service (and soon-to-be mobile app) for people interested in global humanitarian, development and human rights news. We charge less than $3/month for our service and use our revenue to support a grant program for journalists, bloggers and photographers with compelling humanitarian stories to tell. If you are interested in news from the developing world sign up for a free month trial.

Some exciting happenings around these parts: DAWNS Digest is partnering with the team that is putting on the Global Festival in New York’s Central Park on September 29.

Neil Young, the Black Keys, the Foo Fighters, Band of Horses, K’naan…and DAWNS are together at last!

The Global Festival is a free concert by these artists to raise awareness about global poverty and encourage concrete steps we can all take to defeat this scourge.  It may be a free concert, but tickets are not just given away, they must be earned. Would-be festival goers must first become a Global Citizen by creating a profile at GlobalCitizen.org where you can learn about a variety of global development, health and humanitarian issues. When you see an issue that has some personal resonance, you are given a variety of tools to take action.  Once you take a certain number of “actions” you become eligible for tickets.

The organizing force behind this great concept is the Global Poverty Project, which was one of the earliest and most enthusiastic supporters of our daily humanitarian news clips service. Our goal with DAWNS Digest has always been to help bridge the gap between news emanating from the developing world and globally aware audiences around the world.  We were flattered when they asked us to partner up in this great cause.

If you plan on being in New York City around the big UN Summit this month, go to GlobalCitizen.org to see how you can get involved.

Hello world!

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This is a neat opportunity for any of you photographers out there

Have you photographed the work of a nonprofit organization? PhotoPhilanthropy wants to recognize and reward your work through our Activist Awards!

The PhotoPhilanthropy Activist Awards identify outstanding work done by photographers in collaboration with nonprofit organizations worldwide. In previous years, PhotoPhilanthropy has received work from photographers in 88 different countries, showcasing the work of 435 nonprofit organizations. PhotoPhilanthropy will give awards to photographers in three categories: professional, amateur and student, with prizes from $2,000 to $15,000.

Submissions Open: September 1, 2012

Deadline for Submissions: November 1, 2012

For submission guidelines and more information, please visit photophilanthropy.org/award

Questions About Submissions? Email submissions@photophilanthropy.org

PhotoPhilanthropy addresses critical social and environmental issues around the world by providing nonprofits and photographers with the resources to work together to create images that drive social change.

Press Contact: Christy Wiles, christy@photophilanthropy.org

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