Forus

CAMPAIGN

#PositiveNarratives

For an enabling environment for civil society.

A campaign bringing to the forefront the stories of human rights defenders, journalists, innovative projects decolonising language and building bridges across communities , from within and beyond the Forus network.

Narratives matter. Forus and its members have begun to engage with an exciting and innovative body of work on alternative narrative building, much of which has been led by civil society organisations from the human rights community. This work is aimed in part at better explaining the role of civil society and the public value of its work. Like others who are engaging with this narrative building work, Forus and its members believe that it will help to promote higher levels of public confidence in, and engagement with civil society and its work, and will ultimately strengthen civic space, and bolster democracy around the world.  

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Journalism Fellowship

Shaping #PositiveNarratives

Journalism meets civic action building stories that make change visible.

 

Forus has established the Forus Journalism Fellowship programme as part of its #PositiveNarrative campaign. This initiative provides opportunities for journalists all over the world who have experience and passion in advancing social justice, human rights, and sustainable development by reporting on civil society and community-led activities.  

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Women and Environmental Leadership, 3 Voices Moving Africa The care system in Venezuela: Laws without oversight Feministas sob ataque na internet: quando o ódio vira algoritmo - AzMina How Nepal’s Pride and Gai Jatra Movements Are Advancing Queer Equality Great Lakes: Local associations, a bastion of hope Es Casa Frida LGBTI+ refugio y defensa de migrantes contra tortura policial - Luces del Siglo The Collective Shield: West Africa Civil Society’s United Front Against Restrictions on Civic Space- Case of Togo and Senegal Feminist Organisations Defending Civic Space in West Africa Sobre los rieles de Yucatán: crónica fotográfica del Tren Maya As Uganda Heads to 2026 Polls, Civil Society Turns to Peace Journalism to Protect Democracy Beyond Aid: How Women-Led Agroforestry Is Strengthening Food Security and Climate Resilience in Uganda Unbroken Spirit of Mukesh Awasthi: As Nepal’s Youth Demanded Transparency and Dignity, a Single Bullet Changed Everything Energy crisis in Mali: between citizen resilience, civil mobilisation and restrictions on civic space Nigeria: Digital Dissent and Democracy- How CSOs Innovate to Protect Civic Space Online - Cameroon News Agency Digital Space, Artificial Intelligence, and the Struggle for Civic Life Digital Freedoms in West Africa: A Landscape of Tragedies, Coups, Arrests and Resistance IAs de direitos humanos contra discurso de ódio e desinformação - AzMina Poseidón contra dioses mayas, el litigio indígena contra una estatua griega en el mar yucateco Feminismos hackers constroem tecnologia pública - AzMina Digital Harassment and Disinformation in West Africa: How Online Attacks Are Shrinking the enabling environment in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger
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Discover the initiative ReImagina La Defensa de Derechos by UNITAS, Forus member in Bolivia, that aims to make visible the narrowing of civic space, by exposing data from their Observatory of Human Rights Defenders and narrating the stories of human rights defenders to motivate reflection.

 

The campaign is developed around five axes: 

  • Freedom of association 
  • Freedom of the press 
  • Freedom of peaceful assembly and the right to protest 
  • Freedom of expression 
  • Democratic institutionality 
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ON DECOLONISING LANGUAGE

Over many decades, the international development system has evolved its own lexicon of words and idioms that shape how people understand and give meaning to their efforts and relationships.

 

A result is that communications relied on by NGOs and the aid industrial complex have become imbued with neo-colonial, sexist and racist terms. These create and maintain power imbalances with formulations that are insensitive to many involved. Discover this tool developed by Ringo in partnership with Forus member in Uganda, UNNGOF, using AI to try to transform the use of language in the sector, both by abolishing neo-colonial or other inappropriate language, and by enabling people to communicate in their local language. This tool searches and replaces flagged words and phrases with alternative words or phrases with an explanation. By using it, you are part of the change-making team making inclusive communication the norm, not the exception.

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EN - AI to decolonise language and capacity development | Forus

EN - AI to decolonise language and capacity development

THE CHALLENGES

  • One of the main reasons why civil society activists are starting to build” alternative narratives” is because of the growing realisation that the dominant narratives are undermining activism.  The dissemination of these increasingly dominant and negative narratives, targeted especially at human rights and gender activists, as well as environmental defenders, is used by different groups to keep certain ideas or sets of existing power relations in place.
  • The popularization of these negative narratives often results in less public support and protection being available for campaigners and activists when they are subjected to attacks, or where efforts are made to undermine or to restrict their public interest work. Narratives are a form of power that can mobilize and connect, as well as divide and isolate.
  • A failure by civil society organisations to communicate the importance of their work in terms that can be understood by those outside of the democracy, human rights and development fields can have serious implications. 
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CHANGING PRACTICES

  • An increasing number of civil society organisations believe that they can encourage much greater levels of public understanding of, and support for their work through building their own alternative and positive narratives. This will contribute to creating a stronger societal foundation for the public interest work of civil society and ensure greater public protection for activists and campaigners from unwarranted attacks.
  • Civil society organisations who have led the work on alternative narrative- building also emphasise the importance of not “imposing “ narratives on different groups and constituencies but rather co-constructing narratives.
  • The overall aim of alternative narrative building is to positively influence public perceptions and attitudes, and this takes time. It is important that alternative narrative building initiatives adopt a longer-term approach.
  • Language matters. Whether the audience is at the international, national, or local level, the message of civil society and their members needs to be decolonised, simplified and more direct.
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