WINGS is at different times horrifying, exciting, funny, eye-opening and definitely inspirational. — Nikki Reece, program producer, Plains FM, Christchurch, New Zealand
WINGS: Women’s International News Gathering Service is an all-woman independent radio production company that produces and distributes news and current affairs programs by and about women around the world. WINGS programs are used by non-commercial radio stations, women’s studies, and individuals. Programs can be heard on local radio stations, on shortwave, on the internet, and on cassettes. The WINGS Mailing List provides updates on stories and new information about women’s media. “Though I have been involved in women’s issues for years, I was still struck by the contrast of your broadcast to the news we are usually hearing — news reflecting male interests in a basically male world. Women’s affairs are a hidden current in the flow of world events.”– Kristin Reilly, listener, Buffalo, New YorkWINGS Mailing List:E-mail [email protected] to receive periodic e-mail updates about WINGS programs and women’s media issues.
March 23, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Suppressed Histories Archives
Women's International News Gathering Service (WINGS) contributor Mindy Ran interviewed Max Dash in Amsterdam via zoom in March 2024, for Women's History Month. Max Dashu founded the Suppressed Histories Archives in 1970 to research and document women's history from an international perspective. She built a collection of more than 50,000 images (Website: suppressedhistories.net). In the interview, Dashu explains how and why she started the Suppressed Histories Archive and explains some of the obstacles and complications in appropriately finding and interrogating the biases of various kind of sources. She notes how the technical demands and opportunities have arisen for the project over its 54 years and her hopes for making the entire collection searchable and accessible.
ListenMarch 16, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Kenyans Walk for Palestine
The African Union has declared full support for Palestine, condemned Israel's actions in Gaza, and requested its 55 member states "to end all direct and indirect trade, scientific and cultural exchanges with Israel." But Kenya's government has pledged solidarity with Israel, and met large pro-Palestine demonstrations in the capital Nairobi with tear gas and arrests. On February 24th, 2024, hundreds of people took to the streets in Kenya's second-largest city Mombasa, to "walk for Palestine" - among them, women and children carrying placards condemning the ongoing killing. The interviewees provided local, national and international perspectives, and share recent statistics about destruction of Gaza and Gazans.
ListenMarch 9, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Truth To Power (women journalists vs. censorship)
The most dangerous job in journalism involves reporting on the wrongdoing of governments, corporations, and major criminals in one's own country. Forms of censorship can include imprisonment and death, even in alleged democracies. The women in this program spoke on a panel at a conference themed "Speaking Truth to Power" in Delhi in 2015.
Read MoreMarch 2, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Structural Adjustment (an economic tool to exploit women)
Structural Adjustment is the name of an economic regime imposed mainly on less developed countries that enforces drastic cuts to public employment and services spending in exchange for international lending. It also mandates privatization and opening to foreign investment, and pushes the resulting hardships largely onto women and their families. Speakers are Jamaican radio journalist and host Barbara Gloudon, and the following economists: Peggy Antrobus from the Caribbean and Gita Sen from India, founding members of DAWN (Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era - an organization of economists from the global South); Elizabeth Lwanga-Okwenje, African Region Director, Oxfam America; Elaine Zuckerman, former employee of World Bank; and Alice Rivlin, Brookings Institution.
Read MoreFebruary 24, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Power Race Sex
For US Black History Month, today's program provides excerpts from a very vibrant - almost rollicking discussion among distinctive viewpoints on Black women's power and that of their communities from the panel "Power: Is It a Sexual Thing?" at the National Association of Black Journalists conference, 1991, held in Kansas City, Missouri (updated to 2024). The Moderator is Beverly "Bevy" Smith from Black Entertainment TV. Panelists: economist and columnist Julianne Malveaux; Gwendolyn Grant from the Kansas City Urban League and KCTP public TV; columnist Dorothy Butler Gilliam, first African American woman reporter at The Washington Post; and, anthropologist Niara Sudarkasa, president of Lincoln University.
Read MoreFebruary 17, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Accented English
Why do people whose first language is not English have different accents? How do North Americans' reactions to that affect the immigrants' lives? How can North Americans learn to listen better and with respect instead of stigma? Today's program addresses these questions and features: Rosina Lippi-Green, PhD in Linguistics and author of "English with an Accent"; Evelyne Ello-Hart of Cote d'Ivoire, program supervisor for the Africa Womens Coalition in Portland, Oregon (whom speaks seven languages, including Italian); a woman from Laos who works for the Refugee Resettlement Program whom speaks Vietnamese, Laotian Thai, variants of Chinese, and English; Dora Reina, an accountant from Mexico, living in the US and taking English classes; and, Tracey Derwing, PhD, professor in the TESL (Teaching English as a Second Language) program in Educational Psychology at the University of Alberta, who co-directed the Prairie Metropolis Research Centre of Excellence for Research on Migration and Integration (she researched how to teach native speakers of English to become better listeners to people with different accents and she is the lead author of the book "Pronunciation Fundamentals").
Read MoreFebruary 10, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Global Homelessness (the role of war)
Human displacement and homelessness keep growing and growing. In a "parable" of uncertain attribution, there's a community struggling to save babies who float down river in increasing numbers, and someone says "Let's find out who's putting them in there." Brazilian environmentalist and organizer Magda Renner made it her duty to find out. Renner passed away in 2016, at nearly 90 years of age. This is her address to the World Women's Congress for a Healthy Planet in 1991. This meeting attended by 1500 women from around the world was a lead-in to the first UN Conference on the Environment in Rio de Janeiro, 1992. Update 2024.
Read MoreFebruary 3, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
HIV-Affected Children
For 2024, UNAIDS has chosen the theme "Let Communities Lead." In this program, you hear from children and their mothers who have come together to deal with HIV education for children and their parents. Also discussed is self-esteem building for those who live with the infection and the medications and histories of children with the disease. Also heard is an administrator from Kenya's Ministry of Education and a UNAIDS employee speaking to the press.
Read MoreJanuary 27, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Global Gag Rule (is making a comeback)
Republicans in Congress are refusing to re-authorize AIDS funding abroad unless the global gag rule is incorporated into the legislation. Today's program goes into the origin and effects of this rule, which was at its highest peak during the Trump presidency.
Read MoreJanuary 20, 2024 National, News & Public Affairs
Superheroines and our Psyches
Hilda Fernandez talks with Frieda Werden about our relationships with superheroines and superheroes, and how those can play a role in psychoanalysis. They discuss the special qualities of favourite superheroines, and how their powers, usually different than males', have been treated and mistreated by various writers over the years. Lacanian psychoanalyst Hilda Fernandez talks with Frieda Werden about our relationships with superheroines and superheroes, and how those can play a role in psychoanalysis. The update of this episode mentions that the new Batgirl film has been canned by Warner Brothers and DC for unspecified reasons...note that Batgirl's sidekick was to be trans.
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