A media handbook for creating social change
The handbook focuses on how you can work with media to draw attention to any issues aiming at social change.
The handbook focuses on how you can work with media to draw attention to any issues aiming at social change.
The compilation contains baseline data gathered by the Cambodia Health Education Media Service (CHEMS). It contains the result and analysis of survey on knowledge, attitude, beliefs and practices of youth in four areas in Cambodia.
The report, accompanying a data sheet, giving a profile of today's youth, provides data on population, education, and health with special focus on sexual and reproductive health.
The booklet introduces some basic rules and techniques of how to get the best out of the media: how to contact the media, writing a media release, difficulties in dealing with the media, etc.
This resource offers guidance on adapting instruments for monitoring and evaluation, sample data collection instruments, and on collecting data through a variety of methods. This guide draws on the expertise and experience of professionals in a variety of disciplines.
This inter-agency field manual provides a tool that defines how to develop practical and appropriately-focused reproductive health programmes during each phase of conflict and displacement: pre-conflict, conflict, stabilization, and post-conflict.
This article discusses the various effects that Children affected by HIV/AIDS (CABA) are exposed to.
This study used formal reproductive health education and communication with parents on reproductive health among 15-19 year old males from the National Survey of Adolescent Males (1988 and 1995). Female adolescent reports were taken from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth.
The rate of HIV infection in Cambodia is the highest for all of South East Asia at present.
Drug use and HIV vulnerability remain issues of great concern for many countries in Asia and the Pacific because surveys indicate that in some geographical areas more than sixty per cent of all injecting drug users are HIV-positive.