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HIV in PNG – An Ongoing Health Crisis

Over the past two decades, Papua New Guinea has been plagued by the highest incidence of HIV/AIDS in the Asia-Pacific region and there is no indication of the epidemic abating. In order to assess the prevalence of the disease in PNG it is crucial to ascertain the factors which have contributed and facilitated its spread alongside those factors which have hindered effective HIV prevention strategies.

In this essay Louella Fitzsimmons looks at the history of healthcare in Papua New Guinea as well as the political and societal landscape which has allowed HIV/Aids to take root with infection rates rise exponentially. She also contrasts the experience of PNG with that of Fiji.

Historical research of HIV in Papua New Guinea is sparse and so this paper provides a valuable insight into an overlooked Global Health topic.

This essay was submitted in part of the Masters in Social Science & International Development at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.

Author: Louella Fitzsimmons  

HD PDF New   HIV in PNG - An Ongoing Health Crisis (3557)

Media development in transitional democratic Cambodia

Feudal kingdom, French protectorate, modern constitutional monarchy, republic, extreme socialist (Khmer Rouge) and UN mandate – these are a few of the diverse political structures Cambodia has endured and evolved through in its long history. When the Paris Peace Accords were finally signed on 23 October 1991, Cambodia took its first steps as a democratic nation. Twenty years have passed since and while remarkable progress has been made, the country has a long road to travel yet towards democracy.

The media is a powerful tool and has long been understood as an essential building block of democracy. The concept of a free, independent and plural media – as opposed to a media that acts as a propaganda machine – is just as new to Cambodia as the democratic political system it arrived with. As such, the media too has seen remarkable growth – and it too has a long road to travel yet before it can fulfil its ‘watchdog’ role.

This thesis explores the development of the media in transitional democratic Cambodia. It looks at how the media landscape has changed over the last 20 years (what has been the successes and failures and what are the ongoing challenges); the roles of the various stakeholders critical to the evelopment of the media (government, media themselves and development partners); and it assesses five areas critical to the establishment of an independent and sustainable media: the space for free expression, media professionalism, plurality, business management and supporting institutions. In doing so, the link between a public sphere and good governance is emphasised, the important role of the media in state reconstruction reinforced, and the western neoliberal agenda critically explored with a view to how it may be influencing current-day Cambodian political ideology and development.

Through a series of qualitative interviews with a range of media stakeholders, the ultimate conclusion of this thesis is that the media landscape in Cambodia is diverse – with some (mostly foreign-owned and run) able to operate freely and independently, while others (most local Khmer media, particularly broadcast media) are not. While media development activities over the course of the last 20 years have been clearly beneficial to improving the quality of the media, many factors are preventing all media in Cambodia from becoming free, independent and sustainable. A lack of political will, improper legal intimidation, politicisation of the media, a lack of journalistic ethic and professionalism (among some), unsupportive institutional frameworks, media illiteracy among the broader population and little coordination of media development efforts are just some of the barriers that hinder real improvement in this critical sector.

Efforts to improve the media landscape in Cambodia must be conducted alongside other efforts to continue the transition to democracy as these efforts will – and must – overlap if Cambodia and its media are to become truly democratic.

Author: Casey McCarthy  

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Burnt Out Borneo

One of our nearest biological relatives, the Orang-utan, is facing extinction because of deforestation taking place to make way for palm oil plantations. Recent Greenpeace analysis and investigations confirm that expansion in these plantations is having a serious impact on the Orang-utans habitat.

Kate Leslie investigates how palm oil concessions are destroying the Orang-utans habitat and causing climate change.

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