Proposals Nigeria

Nigeria: Genderless Nigeria, Genderless Africa… Genderless Planet

  April 2, 2014

To use educational perspectives to solving gender inequality and violence through media by enabling a platform to raise hopes and aspirations for girl-child in Nigeria, Africa and the world. To use students and schools as a team for the project as a catch-them-young approach to join other existing forces for gender inequalities like World Bank, United Nations to combat the challenge at the community, local, National and international level through acceptable media.

Nigeria: Empowered

  April 2, 2014

The project I propose is to train ten citizen journalists in Ondewari community in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, Nigeria to report about their communities using mobile phones.

Nigeria: Ibasa Riverside Women News

  April 2, 2014

This is a training for 10 women in Ibasa to become citizen journalists and report issues of women online. The women will learn how to report breaking news with their phones and also social networking.

Nigeria: Our Culture Our Heritage (OCOH Project)

  March 25, 2014

The project is aimed at restoring and promoting the culture back to its original form through the use of citizen media With the innovation I intend to use the youth from the Efik community to realize and achieve the aim of the project Through the use of modern tools of communications. According to the Nigeria Education policy it is stated that the native language of a particular community should be used in teaching the learners to enhance effective comprehension of what is being taught ,it is the reverse in my locality.With the ocoh project our culture will be promoted.

Nigeria: Citizen Media for Peace Building in Kafanchan

  March 19, 2014

Communities around Kafanchan continue to be targets of ethnic/ religious conflicts that has destroyed lives and homes since 2011. Several Government-sponsored efforts do not seem to be achieving the desired results. The main perpetrators of the violence are armed youths on opposing sides while the bulk of the consequences are borne by women who have to look after the wounded, the dying and cope with the loss of loved ones. So far, there is no systematic video documentation that captures the stories of the women on both sides, who are bear the brunt of the violence