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durability

LESSON

Lesson Learned: Enabling Local Information and Media Literacy for a Better-Informed Society in Colombia

Long-term sustainability and efficiency of a project is dependent on a building a strong network of partnerships with relevant actors such as civil society organisations, schools, and community media. Building and leaning on strong partnerships can allow projects to build on existing initiatives rather than act in isolation, duplicate efforts, and ensure longer-term funding and support from relevant actors. For example, in this project a Training-of-Trainers approach through partnering with academic institutions to implement a diploma in an academic setting could have ensured the programme’s continuation to train new cohorts of teachers and expanded its national reach. Additionally, supporting projects to develop independent income streams through partnerships with government agencies, philanthropies, or private actors could work to reduce dependence on stipends in the long-term.

UDF-19-870-COL_4
Project Partner
Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa/ Press Freedom Foundation
Project Description

This strategic four-year project works to increase the presence of local news in rural areas of Colombia, so as to encourage civic participation, sound governance and democratic discussion. Building on previous projects the grantee has implemented for UNDEF, journalism labs will expand from two regions to four, bringing more media and digital literacy training programmes to community leaders and groups, women and young people; support post-training local content production and communication to ensure at least one monthly product on local issues; and build an experimental media and digital literacy programme for local schools. The project is highly relevant in the Covid-19 world and its aftermath, where the fight against disinformation and for freedom of information, media literacy and online safety will be crucial; and where it will be essential to advance understanding of the specific impact of the crisis on women and young people, ensuring that responses uphold their rights and are inclusive of their needs.

Evaluation Date
August 2025
Theme
Country
LESSON

Lesson Learned: Enabling National Initiatives to Take Democracy Beyond Elections

To enhance sustainability and support the establishment of nascent deliberative democracy networks at country or regional level, partner selection is crucial as they should be the actors to take the approach forward in the aftermath of the project. In the selection of countries to pilot Citizen Assembly projects, primary consideration should be given to the existence of these organizations and their willingness, capacity and interest to advance the issue, as well as the wider attitude towards deliberative democracy models.

Project Partner
The newDemocracy Foundation
Project Description

Making democracies more inclusive requires bold and innovative reforms to bring the young, the poor, and minorities into the political system. Some countries have piloted initiatives for assemblies on specific issues where members are not nominated by political parties but chosen at random for a limited term to represent all sectors of society, to prevent the formation of self-serving and self-perpetuating political classes disconnected from their electorates. The project aims to enable more countries to develop initiatives of this kind. It will develop and distribute a handbook on ‘Democracy Beyond Elections’ designed to show how nations at various levels of development can apply the principles of representation and deliberation in ways that are appropriate to their economic and educational circumstances. The project will fund three pilot projects to further the demonstration effect and produce a documentary based on one of these to demonstrate how deliberative democracy can work in practice. Among citizens, the project will work to build the sense that ordinary people are involved in making decisions that affect them, and thus to promote trust in Government. Among elected representatives, the project will work to stimulate a greater openness to complementary democratic models in which citizens explore and recommend policy solutions on key issues.

Evaluation Date
March 2025
LESSON

Lesson Learned: Monitoring Implementation of UN Treaty Bodies’ Recommendations in Morocco

Material outputs are most useful when they hold long-term temporal value and become staple references, such as handbooks and online repertories. Material outputs that require regular content update need to be clearly and productively linked to sustainability strategies. This applies to the project’s online resource the Rights Index Platform, because UN Treaty Bodies’ Recommendations available within the portal require regular updates corresponding with the publication schedules of human rights reports.

Project Partner
Médiateur pour la Démocratie et les Droits de l’Homme
Project Description

The project’s objective is to support in an inclusive way the monitoring of governmental efforts to implement UN treaty body recommendations, by bringing together civil society organizations and parliamentary actors to develop a monitoring mechanism; conducting a capacity development programme on international human rights law, monitoring, and advocacy in four regions; and mobilizing legislators to effectively exercise their roles and responsibilities in holding the government accountable for its commitments to implement UN treaty body recommendations.

Evaluation Date
February 2024
Country