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| IWPR Training Programme
is designed to work with journalists to develop their professional
capacities as part of our overall effort to strengthen local media.
Whether a young reporter starting out or an experienced professional,
all journalists benefit from continuing skills development, particularly
in sharing experiences from different media traditions. |
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Capacity |
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Senior editors
provide evaluation and feedback, and regularly run training
sessions and workshops. 
IWPR training is fully integrated into the editorial
process. On-going discussion, feedback and formal written
article
evaluations form an integral part of the on-going production
work of all editors. In addition, IWPR works with experienced
journalists around the world; they examine the work of trainee
journalists and write author evaluations as part of our Senior
Mentor Programme. 
Specific, separately budgeted training projects are developed
according to needs and available resources, such as IWPR's three-month-long,
certificate-based
training programmes in Central Asia. |
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Resources |
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Below
are listed several important resources for IWPR authors and editors. |
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| In the News |
IWPR
international justice reporter Katy Glassborow speaks to the
BBC World Service Focus on Africa programme about Darfur rebel
leader Abu Garda's initial appearance at the International Criminal
Court.
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In
First Kill Your Family, [IWPR] journalist and Africa hand
Peter Eichstaedt offers shocking details from the first-hand
experiences of people who have participated in the war in northern
Uganda as children and adults. |
Lisa
Clifford, a reporter for IWPR, says the Al-Bashir arrest warrant
and other controversies have damaged the reputation of the international
criminal court. |
In
southern provinces [of Afghanistan], up to 70 per cent of Taliban
fighters are non-ideological unemployed young men given a gun
before each attack and paid a pittance according to a report
by IWPR. |
"The
Taliban, for all their faults, have proven to have a fairly
sophisticated media policy," said Jean MacKenzie, IWPR
Afghanistan director. |
IWPR
reporter Katy Glassborow says it would be "absolutely devastating
to the reputation of the [ICC]" if judges decide there is no
case to answer [against Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir] on
the charge of genocide. |
IWPR
Iraq editor Neil Arun discusses the outcome and significance
of the Iraqi provincial elections. |
Darfuris
interviewed by IWPR have dismissed warnings by Sudanese citizen
groups that the indictment of president Omar al-Bashir for genocide
would destabilise their country. |
Janjaweed
militias once loyal to the Sudanese government are reconsidering
their stance because they fear indictment by the International
Criminal Court, reports IWPR. |
"No
agency, either international or local, is trying to properly
investigate and map [extra-judicial] killings [in the Philippines]
to see how they are linked," said Alan Davis, director
of the Philippine Human Rights Project. |
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