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BCCP News

Driving Social Change: The Role of Strategic Communication in Social Development

Communication is an essential part of life. Humans learn to communicate even before we can talk or read and write. The earlier one-directional concept of Information
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BCCP News

Advancing Excellence in Strategic Communication: BCCP’s Flagship Workshop Empowers Social Development Leaders

The Bangladesh Center for Communication Programs (BCCP) recently hosted its 28th Advances
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BCCP News

Bridging Humanity: Public communication Impact in the Rohingya Crisis

The Emergency Multi-Sector Rohingya Crisis Response Project (EMCRP), funded by the World Bank, has been a lifeline for Rohingya refugees and host communities in Cox’s Bazar. At its core
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BCCP News

Editorial: Shaping a Better Future Through Strategic Communication

The path to a better society is surfaced with our ability to communicate effectively, share ideas, and inspire change. Across the world, strategic communication

Scoop News International Publication

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The Guardian – online version

The essential ingredient of any vaccination programme? Women

We call on leaders meeting at the World Health Summit to help remove all gender-related barriers to immunization against diseases such as polio
• Dr Sania Nishtar is the chief executive officer of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and Svenja Schulze is Germany’s federal minister for economic cooperation and development When confronting diseases such as polio in Gaza and mpox outbreaks in some African countries, we must remember one of the biggest

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Aljazeera

Optical illusion’: Key takeaways from COP29 at Baku

Rich countries have pledged to contribute $300bn a year by 2035 to help poorer nations combat the effects of climate change after two weeks of intense negotiations at the United Nations climate summit (COP29) in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku. While this marks a significant increase from the previous $100bn pledge, the deal has been sharply criticized by developing nations as woefully insufficient to address the scale of the climate crisis. Developing nations say $300bn COP29 deal not enough after agreement

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The Guardian

Thirty-five million Africans driven from homes by war and climate disasters – report

Rich countries have pledged to contribute $300bn a year by 2035 to help poorer nations combat the effects of climate change after two weeks of intense negotiations at the United Nations climate summit (COP29) in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku. While this marks a significant increase from the previous $100bn pledge, the deal has been sharply criticized by developing nations as woefully insufficient to address the scale of the climate crisis.

Sangjog Editorial Board

Mohammad Shahjahan
Chairperson and Editor
A.K. Shafiqur Rahman
Member Secretary and Executive Editor
Abu Hasib Mostafa Jamal
Member
Md Mizanur Rahman
Member
Nusrat Jahan Tarin
Member
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