Rights Reporting Project Launches Handbook
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The Philippine Human Rights Reporting Project (www.rightsreporting.net) announces the launch of its handbook, 'Reporting Human Rights in the Philippines: A Field Guide for Journalists and Media Workers' on May 27, 2009 in Quezon City, Philippines. The handbook has been produced as part of the organisation's efforts to root better human rights awareness in the Philippine media and out into society at large. Over the past 18 months, the Project has developed and delivered a series of specialised practical training sessions to a core group of more than 400 print, online, radio, and television journalists working throughout the country. The handbook is meant to be a part of the journalist's tool kit when reporting human rights and as a handy resource for anyone concerned with improving human rights in the Philippines. Alongside practical advice and instruction, it includes summaries of human rights concepts, treaties and instruments. It provides online sources to human rights documents; offers journalists different ways to explore human rights as a story; and provides safety advice and tips on how to link up with human rights organisations and other like-minded groups. The Philippine Human Rights Reporting Project is an active collaboration between the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, Center for Community Journalism and Development, National Union of Journalists of the Philippines and MindaNews. The Project is funded by the State Department's Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor. For more information, send email to iwprphilippines@yahoo.com or call (632) 376 5550 or (63) 905 315 4986. |








Aung Htun (not his real name) is one of the young video journalists featured in the award-winning feature documentary 'Burma VJ (Reporting from a Closed Country)'. 