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Wanted – A Civic and Community Media Alliance

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With the prospect of a change of government in the UK, it is increasingly clear that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) isn’t doing its job properly, and will soon be required to implement a more effective consultation and development framework for policy in relation to community and community-focused media. This new framework should fully recognise and incorporate the essential role and public purpose of community media and community-focused communications. This isn’t happening at present, with DCMS offering only fragmented and opaque glimpses into the minds of both ministers and the civil servants who are implementing their policies. Who knows what is going on behind the closed doors of Whitehall in relation to community media thinking and policy?

The unique value of community media and community-focused forms of communication is grossly undervalued in the UK. One would think that after fourteen years, a government that was once committed to Levelling-Up, Localism, Social Value and the Big Society, would have been able to facilitate an inclusive, participatory, and locally relevant media infrastructure, rather than the centralised, corporate and disengaged industrial media that we must now endure.

Community media is crucial for enabling different communities to engage in meaningful dialogue, share their stories, and voice their concerns. The lack of investment, leadership and challenge from DCMS, however, means there is a compelling case for rebooting the whole relationship between government and civic society grounded media. It should be noted that our current situation of economic stagnation, recession and endless fragmentation of the social realm hear in the UK, means that there is a compelling case for the establishment of a broad alliance of civic society organisations, public sector entities, community groups, and charities who may be willing to use media for a more strategic and purposeful social function.

Such an alliance would advocate for an equitable stake in the media infrastructure, aiming to enhance and streamline their public engagement efforts. This strategic collaboration seeks to ensure that all parts of society can contribute to and shape the media landscape, fostering a more democratic, informed, and cohesive public sphere.

The pivotal role of community media in fostering civic engagement, social cohesion, and empowerment within communities in the UK, has been underplayed for some time now. What we are missing is a government that advocates for the formation of alliances among civic society organisations, community groups, charities, and public sector bodies that can strengthen the impact that community media has in contributing towards change.

Key themes for consideration would include, for example, empowerment and social impact, networking and expertise sharing, advocacy and support for the community media sector, career development through media skills’ enhancement, community engagement, and advocacy for local information needs. None of which should be surprising to any government policy advocate if they have read and understood the Social Value and Levelling Up legislation and processes.

What we need from the government, then, are clear strategies for using community media to address social issues, promote community-led solutions, engage minority communities, enhance cultural understanding, utilise social media for community engagement, and implement social-economy type funding for all kinds of social policy projects. Essentially, the government should be bringing people together from across the broad spectrum of civic society and public authorities to discuss the importance of promoting civic engagement, advocating for social cohesion, enhancing media literacy, securing funding and operational autonomy for community media, and providing legislative recognition of community media as a distinct sector with its own role and sense of public purpose.

What are the strategies that central government might deploy that could make community media accessible to all community members through community ownership, recognised civic service and meaningful participation based on inclusive practices? What are the additional legal protections and policy recognition that will support that community media if it is to thrive as a counterweight to the corporate consolidation of media that has taken place recently? Civic society organisations have many compelling reasons to use and support community media in the UK, primarily because community media serves as an effective platform for achieving several critical objectives, which include:

Through these mechanisms, civic society organisations can impact community media to advance their objectives, support community development, and contribute to a more informed, engaged, and cohesive society. Moreover, civic society organisations, public sector bodies, charities, and community groups can significantly enhance their public purpose and social engagement by fostering and developing community-focused forms of communication. This approach contrasts with relying solely on mass-media and marketing-type forms of communication, offering several distinct advantages that align more closely with their goals of fostering community engagement, promoting social cohesion, and empowering individuals.

Here are some ways they can achieve this:

By prioritising community-focused forms of communication, organisations can deepen their engagement with the communities they serve, promote more equitable and inclusive public discourse, and more effectively achieve their social and public purpose goals.

So, by forming an alliance of civic society organisations, community groups, charities, and public sector bodies to enhance the role of community media in the UK offers several benefits:

By forming such alliances, organisations and individuals can leverage collective expertise, resources, and advocacy efforts to strengthen community media’s role in promoting social change, empowering communities, and supporting local information needs in the UK.

The purpose of these alliances go beyond simply supporting the organisations involved, but would be driven by the need to address pressing social issues through various strategies and approaches, such as:

By leveraging the power of community media, organisations can address social issues by promoting community-led solutions, encouraging minority engagement, fostering cultural understanding, utilising social media effectively for engagement, and implementing crowdfunding strategies for community projects. These approaches help strengthen relationships within communities, empower marginalised groups, promote inclusivity, and drive positive social change through collaborative efforts facilitated by community media platforms.

To support the work of an alliance of civic society organisations, public sector authorities, community groups, charities, and other socially driven service providers in the UK, community media can play a crucial role by:

By recognising the unique role of community media in promoting civic engagement, advocating for social cohesion, enhancing media literacy, securing funding and autonomy, and seeking legislative recognition as a distinct sector of the media landscape, these platforms can effectively support the work of alliances aiming to address social issues and drive positive change within communities in the UK.

Community media can be effectively used to promote the work of civic society organisations through various strategies and approaches, such as:

By investing in community media as a platform for civic engagement, building strategic partnerships, implementing effective outreach strategies, utilising tech tools for outreach, and incorporating social influence marketing tactics, civic society organisations can effectively promote their work and engage with communities through community media platforms in the UK.

To ensure that community media is accessible to all members of the community, several strategies can be implemented based on the information from the search results:

By prioritising community ownership, service, and participation; adopting a non-profit business model; practising inclusivity; empowering communities through media literacy; seeking legal recognition and support; community media can effectively ensure accessibility to all members of the community. These strategies promote diversity, engagement, and representation within community media platforms, fostering a more inclusive and participatory media environment for local populations. 

The document primarily discusses the imperative need for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) in the UK to adopt a more effective policy consultation and development framework that duly acknowledges the vital role and public purpose of community media and community-focused communications. It highlights the underappreciation of community media’s unique value in the UK’s current media landscape, which remains dominated by centralized, corporate, and disengaged industrial media despite previous government commitments to localism and social value.

A reboot of the relationship between the government and civic society-grounded media, particularly in the face of economic stagnation and social fragmentation, is essential. We need to see an incoming government take the lead on the formation of a broad alliance of civic society organisations, public sector entities, community groups, and charities, all aiming to use media strategically for social functions. This alliance would advocate for an equitable stake in the media infrastructure to enhance public engagement and ensure diverse community voices are heard and represented.

There is a critical role and many social benefits to be gained from a functioning and well-supported community media sector, including empowerment and social impact, networking and expertise sharing, advocacy and support, community engagement, and advocacy for local information needs. It calls for government strategies that leverage community media to address social issues, engage minority communities, enhance cultural understanding, and implement social-economy type funding for social policy projects.

A new government must rapidly move to realise the benefit of promoting participatory communication, focusing on local issues and voices, building trust and credibility, empowering marginalised voices, facilitating social cohesion and integration, enhancing media literacy, and innovating with digital and social media to achieve these goals. We need systemic change in how the DCMS and the UK government as a whole view and interact with community media. We need a civic society movement that advocates for a media environment that is more inclusive, participatory, and reflective of the diverse society it serves, through the establishment of an alliance dedicated to promoting the value and potential of community media in fostering a democratic, informed, and cohesive public sphere.

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