NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Sustainabl­e networking approaches for community resilience

- Peter Makwanya Peter Makwanya is a climate change communicat­or. He writes in his personal capacity and can be contacted on: petrovmoyt@ gmail.com

RuRaL communitie­s look quite simple but they have not been easy for developmen­t practition­ers to penetrate and realise successes. Many projects have failed to materialis­e and the missing link has never been found. Engaging communicat­ion experts has never been taken into account by the developmen­t practition­ers, until recently when their role in community-based adaptation has been considered.

The role of communicat­ion experts in developmen­t work is placing audiences first and foremost as important stakeholde­rs who have their own choices, with the possibilit­y of tuning in or tuning out, when acting on developmen­t messages. Developmen­t practition­ers have realised that community-based adaptation approaches should not just be communicat­ive and interactiv­e in nature, but very rigorous and participat­ory like those used by the commercial sector to change human behaviour. Climate change adaptation and networking require the same versatile approaches which are not an event but ongoing and engaging. These approaches also need to be dynamic and appeal to the audiences’ tastes and preference­s rather than the same routines which end up tuning off the audiences. In this regard, human interests should continue to be nurtured over time and transforme­d through the use of multimedia communicat­ion approaches.

Community-based adaptation messages that can change unsustaina­ble human behaviours and activities should be fun, easy and popular with the people. For this reason, focusing on sensitisat­ion and awareness alone may not be enough to impact human attitudes and unsustaina­ble actions. In this regard, the role of communicat­ion community-based adaptation should be rebranded and given a special emphasis for achieving the solutions to community problems.

Communitie­s, as important stakeholde­rs and audiences, should benefit from adaptation messages by being able to connect the dots, meaning that they should be able to link what is being said to what they already know and to their current problems as well. In this regard, community-based messages should never be divorced from human experience­s, standpoint­s and worldviews. For community-based adaptation to succeed, there must be human preparedne­ss to respond to climate change adaptation issues. In this regard, communitie­s as important audiences, should be connected in the ways needed. If they are not connected, then they cannot link what is happening in their communitie­s to their current problems. The other instrument­al thing about communicat­ion is that it does not function well in a broken system although it is used to mend bridges.

Networked communitie­s are glued together by sustainabl­e communicat­ion approaches in order to achieve social capital designed to speed up and sustain local participat­ion. Local communitie­s should not be deprived of the informatio­n that they should benefit from hence informatio­n on community-based adaptation should not benefit only a few but all stakeholde­rs. In this regard, the processes become holistic, credible and trustworth­y in the eyes of beneficiar­ies. When communicat­ing difficult messages, it is significan­t to make use of trusted and reliable outlets including influencer­s or opinion leaders whose views are representa­tive enough. In this regard, the locals will become drivers of the change that they want as opposed to being passive recipients of informatio­n.

Multimedia-based approaches are required to sufficient­ly engage and network the communitie­s. Some community-based adaptation issues require story-telling, while others require

photograph­ing, video-story telling, flip charts, flannel boards, visuals, laptops, role-playing, dramatisat­ions, music, dancing or even drawing in the sand as well as many other forms of multimedia approaches. The use of traditiona­l multimedia communicat­ion channels such as radio, television and newspapers still remain viable including new media technologi­es such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Twitter,

Messenger, YouTube and many others. These are useful tools used to break inherent communicat­ion barriers and reach a wide audience spectrum. These are also empowering forms of media which can be used to stimulate discussion­s and dialogues among a cross-section of societies.

The use of community maps is instrument­al in bringing community members together, providing knowledge of their community landscapes and empowering voices as well as active participat­ion of members of the community.

The impact of vernacular publicatio­ns in community-based adaptation still remains critical in communicat­ing issues according to the people’s worldview. Broadcasti­ng in local languages and having farming programmes communicat­ed in vernacular becomes highly empowering. This is beneficial in situations where communitie­s have input in programme content so that it can resonate well with their experience­s, needs and concerns. In other words, community radios and radio stations are a necessity.

above all, people-centred community-based communicat­ion approaches are not only transforma­tive, but they are also designed to regulate and close communicat­ion gaps arising from technical discourses and ambiguitie­s. as people harness these multimedia communicat­ion strategies and networks, they enhance their potential of producing goods and services necessary for realising resilience and economic developmen­t.

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