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Editorial guide for addressing gender-based violence

Editorial guide for addressing gender-based violence

DW4 hours ago
DW Akademie and Alharaca have published an editorial guide for addressing violence from a gender and intersectional perspective as part of the joint project #CambiaLaHistoria
Amid constant threats to the practice of journalism, multiple crises -social, economic, political and climatic- and setbacks in human rights, DW Akademie and the Salvadoran media Alharaca present a tool that strengthens the role of editors as guarantors of rigorous, critical and sensitive investigations in Latin America.
The Editorial guide for addressing violence from a gender and intersectional approach, compiled by 30 editors from independent and community media in the region, offers strategies, key questions and practical examples that address complex coverage of violence from a gender, intersectional and constructive approach.
The guide advises avoiding re-victimization and criminalization. It recommends counteracting extractivist information and incorporating diversity in editorial processes, both in the content produced and in how newsrooms function. It includes chapters on self-care and safety, as well as recommendations that address constructive narratives, resistance and social movements that take care of their audiences and their sources. Finally, it adds a proposal for a collaborative, inclusive and intersectional glossary.
This collective guide is part of the journalistic training and production project #CambiaLaHistoria, which combines the gender and intersectional perspective with constructive journalism. Editing from an integrative perspective
Elizabeth Otálvaro, co-director of Revista Mutante (Colombia), and editor in the third edition of #CambiaLaHistoria, helped develop this guide, and she considers it urgent "to approach the stories we tell from a historical, spatial and inequality perspective." Otálvaro accompanied the investigations of six journalists of #CambiaLaHistoria for six months Image: Elizabeth Otálvaro
At the same time, she emphasizes reforming conventional journalism.
"If care is at the center of editorial work - care of the journalist, of his sources, of the story and of the audiences,' she explained, 'then we are trying to make a journalism that subverts its extractivism, that transforms its hierarchical and violent practices." Strengthening local journalism
Nathalia Salamanca Sarmiento, editorial board member at Agenda Propia, a DW Akademie partner in Colombia, also helped developguide, and this marks a before and after in her career.
"I lived the experience as an exchange of knowledge among Latin American communicators,' she said, 'where good practices were shared, but also the challenges and pains we go through in the profession." In Santiago de Chile, where she migrated from Colombia, Salamanca works as a writer, researcher and journalist Image: Denys Salas
Salamanca urges both collaboration and a plural perspective. "Generating spaces for conversation between editors and publishers is fundamental,' she said. "It is a reminder of the importance of the structures that make journalism possible and of the celebration that comes from being able to continue working as a team."
This editorial guide is an invitation to rethink the editorial process with listening, respect, affection, diversity and, above all, care. It is a living transformation tool for journalism in which it matters not only what is told, but also how and from where it is told.
The guide can be downloaded below.
#CambiaLaHistoria , a joint project of DW Akademie and Alharaca, has been supported by Germany's Federal Foreign Office since 2021.
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Editorial guide for addressing gender-based violence
Editorial guide for addressing gender-based violence

DW

time4 hours ago

  • DW

Editorial guide for addressing gender-based violence

DW Akademie and Alharaca have published an editorial guide for addressing violence from a gender and intersectional perspective as part of the joint project #CambiaLaHistoria Amid constant threats to the practice of journalism, multiple crises -social, economic, political and climatic- and setbacks in human rights, DW Akademie and the Salvadoran media Alharaca present a tool that strengthens the role of editors as guarantors of rigorous, critical and sensitive investigations in Latin America. The Editorial guide for addressing violence from a gender and intersectional approach, compiled by 30 editors from independent and community media in the region, offers strategies, key questions and practical examples that address complex coverage of violence from a gender, intersectional and constructive approach. The guide advises avoiding re-victimization and criminalization. It recommends counteracting extractivist information and incorporating diversity in editorial processes, both in the content produced and in how newsrooms function. It includes chapters on self-care and safety, as well as recommendations that address constructive narratives, resistance and social movements that take care of their audiences and their sources. Finally, it adds a proposal for a collaborative, inclusive and intersectional glossary. This collective guide is part of the journalistic training and production project #CambiaLaHistoria, which combines the gender and intersectional perspective with constructive journalism. Editing from an integrative perspective Elizabeth Otálvaro, co-director of Revista Mutante (Colombia), and editor in the third edition of #CambiaLaHistoria, helped develop this guide, and she considers it urgent "to approach the stories we tell from a historical, spatial and inequality perspective." Otálvaro accompanied the investigations of six journalists of #CambiaLaHistoria for six months Image: Elizabeth Otálvaro At the same time, she emphasizes reforming conventional journalism. "If care is at the center of editorial work - care of the journalist, of his sources, of the story and of the audiences,' she explained, 'then we are trying to make a journalism that subverts its extractivism, that transforms its hierarchical and violent practices." Strengthening local journalism Nathalia Salamanca Sarmiento, editorial board member at Agenda Propia, a DW Akademie partner in Colombia, also helped developguide, and this marks a before and after in her career. "I lived the experience as an exchange of knowledge among Latin American communicators,' she said, 'where good practices were shared, but also the challenges and pains we go through in the profession." In Santiago de Chile, where she migrated from Colombia, Salamanca works as a writer, researcher and journalist Image: Denys Salas Salamanca urges both collaboration and a plural perspective. "Generating spaces for conversation between editors and publishers is fundamental,' she said. "It is a reminder of the importance of the structures that make journalism possible and of the celebration that comes from being able to continue working as a team." This editorial guide is an invitation to rethink the editorial process with listening, respect, affection, diversity and, above all, care. It is a living transformation tool for journalism in which it matters not only what is told, but also how and from where it is told. The guide can be downloaded below. #CambiaLaHistoria , a joint project of DW Akademie and Alharaca, has been supported by Germany's Federal Foreign Office since 2021.

South American Bloc Looks To Asia, Europe In Face Of Trump Trade War
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Salvadoran Prison Officials Admitted to Abrego Garcia 'Your Tattoos Are Fine' Despite Trump Insisting Otherwise: Lawyers
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  • Int'l Business Times

Salvadoran Prison Officials Admitted to Abrego Garcia 'Your Tattoos Are Fine' Despite Trump Insisting Otherwise: Lawyers

Salvadoran prison officials reportedly told wrongfully detained Maryland man Kilmar Abrego Garcia that his tattoos were not gang-related, a direct contradiction of President Donald Trump's repeated claims that he bore MS-13 symbols and posed a violent threat, according to attorneys. Abrego Garcia, who was deported to El Salvador's CECOT prison by the Trump administration in March despite a standing court order prohibiting it, has accused both U.S. and Salvadoran authorities of subjecting him to abuse, deception and fabricated accusations of gang affiliation. The deportation, which the U.S. Supreme Court later acknowledged as illegal, thrust Abrego Garcia into a prison notorious for violence and secrecy, Politico reported. Upon his arrival, he alleged that guards shaved his head, beat him with batons and threw him into an overcrowded cell with 20 other detainees under constant lights and limited access to bathrooms or bedding. Abrego Garcia reportedly lost 31 pounds in two weeks and was not allowed to contact his family or a lawyer until Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen visited him on April 17. Despite Trump's insistence, on television and in court filings, that Abrego had MS-13-related tattoos, Salvadoran prison officials reportedly told him, "Your tattoos are fine." These statements, documented in a 40-page amended complaint filed this week, come from CECOT authorities who routinely deal with gang members and are trained to identify such markings. U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis said the Justice Department failed to provide credible evidence linking Abrego to any gang. Following growing legal pressure, Abrego was eventually released from Salvadoran custody and flown back to the U.S. to face separate human smuggling charges in Tennessee. He remains detained but has opted to stay incarcerated until at least mid-July, citing fears that the Trump administration might deport him again despite ongoing legal proceedings. Originally published on Latin Times

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