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UNESCO launches Portuguese version of its Toolkit for Judiciary in Africa
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UNESCO launches the Portuguese version of its Toolkit for the Judiciary in Africa
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Denmark to strengthen UNESCO s work on safety of journalists in Africa and Arab Region
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UNESCO launches an online course in Arabic on “Journalism in a pandemic
Beirut, 25 January 2021 – A Massive Open Online Course “Journalism in a Pandemic: Covering COVID 19 Now and in the Future”, offered by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at the University of Texas at Austin is now available in Arabic in a self-directed format.
The UNESCO Beirut office has translated the material of the course into Arabic to expand the outreach to all Arabic speaking journalists following the success of 9000 participants from 162 countries taking the original course.
The four-week online training programme aims at providing journalists with the necessary knowledge and tools to cover the COVID-19 health crisis, and the social, financial and political consequences it entails.
of a UNESCO/ICFJ research published on 10 December show that 73% of women journalists who responded to the survey [1] reported having experienced online violence in the course of their work. Twenty-five percent had received threats of physical violence, while 18% of them had been threatened with sexual violence. The problem is not confined to the internet sphere, as 20% of women reported being attacked offline in connection with online violence they had experienced.
The findings were discussed during a session entitled ‘Online violence: The New Front Line for Women Journalists – #JournalistsToo’, hosted by UNESCO and the ICFJ at the World Press Freedom Conference. The session featured award-winning journalists Rana Ayyub, Carole Cadwalladr, Ferial Haffajee, and Julie Posetti, ICFJ’s Global Director of Research.