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Bangkok

Over four hundred women communicators from media organizations and networks in more than 80 countries in all continents of the world met in Bangkok, Thailand (12 -17 February 1994) to discuss issues related to the theme of Women Empowering Communication. The conference was organized by the World Association for Christian Communications (WACC) in London, Isis International in Manila and International Women's Tribune Centre (IWTC) in New York.

In a final statement, participants declared:

Our goal is a more just, people-centred and sustainable world order. We are concerned about development trends: globilisation of economies and the media. This is leading to centralisation of control over both resources and decision-making, with the result that one culture dominates and marginalises women, nature, minorities and indigenous and Third World peoples.

Women are concerned with the basic needs of our societies, with the creation of life and the preservation of the environment, but we are at the bottom of all hierarchies including religious bodies. If our interests are met, the interests of all humanity will also be satisfied. As women working in communication, we see our role as one of ensuring that women's interests, aspirations and visions are centrally located and disseminated.

The so-called 'mainstream' media are a male-dominated tool used by those in power. At the global level they are controlled by the North; nationally they are in the hands of the local elite. As they are now structured, the media propagate unsustainable lifestyles, militarism, growing pauperisation and consumption patterns which turn people into consumers not only of goods but of ideas and ideologies: women, children and the majority of men are invisible and their voices are unheard. There is particular lack of respect for the integrity and dignity of women: stereotyped and dehumanised, we have been turned into commodities. The excessive use of violence in these media is destroying the sensibilities of all humanity.

For all these reasons it is essential to promote forms of communication that not only challenge the patriarchal nature of media but strive to decentralise and democratise them: to create media that encourage dialogue and debate; media that advance women and peoples' creativity; media that reaffirm women's wisdom and knowledge, and that make people into subjects rather than objects or targets of communication. Media which are responsive to people's needs.

In the years since the Nairobi World Conference on Women, which closed the United Nations Decade for Women in 1985, our networks and levels of organisation have grown. We have made many interventions and taken many actions at all levels: local, national, regional and international. Yet despite our achievements, negative global trends have become more powerful.

In this context, we examined various strategies aimed at strengthening and empowering our communications. They include:

Declaration

We also called on the conference organisers to spearhead the following activities

We further recognise that to achieve our goal of social justice and participatory democracy, we shall have to bring pressure to bear on those who now hold power. And so we identified the following strategies on which to focus these efforts:

Governments and Policy-Makers

To implement the numerous international conventions and agreements relating to women including the Nairobi Forward Looking Strategies, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the Vienna Declaration on Human Rights, Agenda 21.

Funding Organizations

To re-examine their funding policies giving priority to strengthening women's media and communications networks through support that is relevant, practical and substantial.

Bangkok

17 February, 19