Career in Development Communication
As the aid and development industry grows and expands, the degrees in ‘development studies’ have increased. Development Communication today has become a medium which mobilizes and educates the masses to make dynamic and intelligent contributions in development activities with utmost efforts.
Development
Communication is further defined in communication studies as a deliberate
effort to improve control over resources and regulatory organizations. It normally
includes educating masses about their socio-economic environment, building
self-reliance based on solidarity support and sharing, involvement of people in
discussions and decision making, inspiring people to gain an aptitude to handle
conflicts and to build consensus.
It
has grown in popularity as a subject of study since the early 1990s, and has
been most widely taught and researched in the third world and in countries with
a colonial history, such as the UK, where development studies originated.
Students of development studies often choose careers in Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) bodies and research centers, international organizations
such as the World Bank, United Nations, private sector development consultancy
firms, and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs).
Scope and Areas of Work
In
Development Communication, importance of communication in the field of
development is duly emphasized. Within the framework of development
communication, two trends have developed successively over the years: First an approach
that favored large-scale actions and relied on the mass media, and Second approach
that endorsed grassroots communication (also called community communication),
promoting small-scale projects and relying heavily on media (slide presentation,
posters, videos, radio etc.).
Development
communication is an extraordinarily broad field. It covers a extensive range of
issues, from the conventional themes of health and public awareness, agriculture,
to newer areas such as small and medium enterprises (SMEs), governance, youth, urban
development, and so on.
Communication
uses a wide range of approaches, from "social marketing" (which emphasize
on advertising and marketing to promote development goals) to participatory
approaches that work with local people and help them communicate their opinions
and needs to others. It includes advocacy and lobbying, highly targeted
campaigns and mass marketing. Determining the right audience is a very
important part of a successful communication intervention, as communication
serves a variety of audiences: teachers, villagers, farmers, herders,
prostitutes, students, policy makers, women, scientists, extension workers,
unemployed youths, health workers, suicidal teenagers, ethnic minorities, small
entrepreneurs, government officials, donors etc.
Communication also employs many diverse types
of media: such as television, radio and the press, emails and websites,
interpersonal media such as face-to-face contact, training courses, meetings,
posters, flyers and handouts.
The
question that now arises is what can you do with a degree in Developmental
studies?
You
can work with:
- Non-governmental organizations by organizing campaigns, lobbying, development education and raising funds.
- International development institutions such as the World Bank and the United Nations.
- Government policy: here you can work in the public service at all levels right from developing strategies and agenda concerning development and aid.
- Consultancy: You can work as a ‘consultant’ for diverse organizations on a variety of projects.
- Another option is that of securing scholarships, to enroll in the development studies courses offered in India as well as overseas.
- There are many scholarships that support development studies like the Commonwealth scholarships, Rhodes and British Chevening scholarship.
Dr. Ritu Sood
Associate Professor
Dept. of Communication Studies
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