Sunday, October 11, 2009

media monitoring project afghanistan

it was an extreme pleasure today to visit the headquarters of the media monitoring project afghanistan. an initiative of the independent election commission, this group has been doing off-air taping of radio and television broadcasts throughout afghanistan since june.



mmpa records several hours of presidential and provincial electoral content from around 20 independent and state-owned broadcasters each day and then indexes that material based on the candidate being covered; whether the reporting was negative, positive, or neutral; the topics addressed; etc.

through this labor, the organization is constructing an comprehensive audio/visual archive not only documenting the contentious afghan presidential election but also a particular slice in time in the development of independent media across the nation.



mmpa boasts that it is leading one of the only quantitative data-gathering projects in afghanistan that does not have an obvious military aim. the group produces weekly reports for the independent election commission (for distribution to the media) detailing trends in coverage, public opinion, etc. based on analysis of the footage.

material is recorded throughout the country and sent on a weekly basis via truck from the provinces to kabul. surprisingly, all of the tapes have shown up and nothing has been lost, even though the couriers put themselves at great risk when traveling certain routes.



as you can see, there is no media monitoring going on in helmand province. as one person remarked, "that is no surprise, considering there was no real election in helmand."

the amazing media monitoring project afghanistan archive may be coming to acku, and i am helping them determine how best to digitize and index the 12-16,000 hours of content, which is a source of great excitement to me.



so much here is unclear! i read a badly translated version of afghanistan's first copyright law (2008) in an attempt to assess today the perspective the state takes on the rights of libraries and archives to acquire, preserve, make accessible audio/visual content so that i could recommend a suitable course of action to acku. egads!

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