Women cheer in Tahrir Square after it is announced that President Hosni Mubarak was giving up power on Feburary 11, 2011 in Cairo, Egypt.
Women cheer in Tahrir Square after it is announced that President Hosni Mubarak was giving up power on Feburary 11, 2011 in Cairo, Egypt. © Chris Hondros/Getty Images

Giving Voice

IWPR’s mission to empower local voices is more important than ever

The How

IWPR has developed ground-breaking approaches that are highly effective at driving positive social change across the globe. Central to the Institute’s work is training and mentoring journalists and rights activists, improving their ability to identity and present factual information through professional research, reporting and production skills.
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IWPR helps creative local talent establish and strengthen media outlets and civic groups, to provide vibrant local platforms so they achieve sustainable local impact. 

IWPR partners with reporters, rights advocates and local groups to mobilise the power of information to tackle critical challenges from violent extremist hate speech, to women’s rights to disinformation and COVID-19 responses. All of this work is guided by IWPR extensive local networks, through hundreds of local partner media and civil society groups and tens of thousands of trained journalists, experts and activists who inform our responses and help ensure targeted and effective impact. 

GIVING VOICE CASE STUDY #1

 

 

 

With information under threat from spiralling repression, hate speech, data breaches and physical attack, IWPR’s mission to empower local voices is more important than ever.

Combating Disinformation in Venezuela

Media and NGO alliance reveals extent to which the issue affects country’s online information space.

An IWPR-supported initiative is bringing together journalists and civil society activists to investigate and expose organised disinformation networks in Venezuela.

IWPR-supported initiative showed that Venezuelan government was heavily involved in distributing pro-regime disinformation. They also identified a network of social media accounts posing as media outlets that existed exclusively to promote Chavista issues in the global media.
IWPR-supported initiative showed that Venezuelan government was heavily involved in distributing pro-regime disinformation. They also identified a network of social media accounts posing as media outlets that existed exclusively to promote Chavista issues in the global media. © Edilzon Gamez/Getty Images

"As a result of one of C-Informa's first investigations, Twitter closed nearly 150 accounts dedicated to distributing propaganda."

GIVING VOICE CASE STUDY #2

 

 

 

With 30 years’ experience, IWPR’s core work is to strengthen the flow of credible, unbiased information, enabling journalists and activists to inform, educate and mobilise communities.

Central Asia: Imams Turn Influencers

IWPR is training a new generation of social media influencers across Central Asia to spread tolerance and counter violent extremism.

Pioneers include Yusufhon Zakaria, a 38-year-old imam in Kyrgyzstan whose messages of co-existence and moderation have helped make him a YouTube and Instagram star across the region.

Yusufhon Zakaria, a 38-year-old Kyrgyz imam whose support for girls’ education has earned him a huge following on Instagram and Youtube.
Yusufhon Zakaria, a 38-year-old Kyrgyz imam whose support for girls’ education has earned him a huge following on Instagram and Youtube. © Y. Zakaria

"I was able to persuade families that it was a good thing to give their girls an education."

Yusufhon Zakaria Kyrgyz imam

GIVING VOICE CASE STUDY #3

 

 

 

IWPR empowers societies to find their own solutions, by strengthening the capacity of media and civic groups to report on and advocate for accountability, freedom of expression and human rights.

Four Million Love Letters to Mosul

IWPR helped organise a mass airdrop of messages of solidarity from ordinary Iraqis to residents of Mosul suffering under Islamic State (IS) occupation.

For more than two years, residents of Iraq’s second largest city had lived in an information blackout, risking execution for watching TV, listening to the radio or using the internet. The airdrop provided them with tangible proof that there were millions of Iraqis outside Mosul sympathising with them – and hope for the future.

youtube video thumbnail for video QJ-gBRmZyUk
Letters To Mosul video by IWPR.

"We never heard of such thing during a war; usually airplanes drop bombs and [this] airplane is dropping love letters."

Iraqi citizen from Baghdad

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