Essays about: "video advocacy"

Found 3 essays containing the words video advocacy.

  1. 1. An Intersectional Feminist WAP Pt. 2 : A Unique Case Study of the WAP Music Video by Cardi B and Meg Thee Stallion

    University essay from Linköpings universitet/Tema Genus

    Author : Nicola Garoutte; [2023]
    Keywords : sexuality; Hip-Hop feminism; HIp-Hop feminist theory; female gaze; intersectionality; intersectional feminism; visual analysis;

    Abstract : Cardi B and Meg Thee Stallion have no problem destroying the male gaze to empower women through the female gaze within the WAP music video. They both empower women by creating a whorehouse for women by women as Cardi B and Meg Thee Stallion both play the role as the entertainer and the entertained therefore forcing the viewer into a trance. READ MORE

  2. 2. The International Committee of the Red Cross: A Century of Consistency : A Care Study of Visual Identity on Facebook

    University essay from Malmö universitet/Institutionen för konst, kultur och kommunikation (K3)

    Author : Katharine Sarah Lloyd-Thomas; [2021]
    Keywords : Social Media; ICRC; Comdev;

    Abstract : The International Committee of the Red Cross and Crescent Moon (ICRC) is a leading global humanitarian organization. Despite an exemplary operational record, the ICRC has an imperfect communication history: slow to respond; painfully neutral; and unwilling change. ICRC history, diplomatic and humanitarian communication has been well researched. READ MORE

  3. 3. An Assessment of Video Advocacy as an Instrument for Change. Case Study: The Our Voices Matter Campaign to Combat Sexual Violence Against Women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

    University essay from Malmö högskola/Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS)

    Author : Carmen Scherkenbach; [2013]
    Keywords : video advocacy; impunity; oral testimony; sexual violence; DRC; Congo; women s rights;

    Abstract : With the rise of new information and communication technologies, advocacy campaigns in development have experienced a resurgence of video as an instrument to enrich outreach efforts and build bridges, to empower marginalised groups and rescue the culture and heritage of indigenous people, and to reach decision-makers – and ultimately change policies and laws. The use of “humanising” elements through film, such as the oral testimonies of individuals, allows practitioners to transport the realities and conditions of specific localities to audiences otherwise unable to experience them directly. READ MORE