Nalaka Gunawardene

Nalaka Gunawardene
Nalaka Gunawardene
Born February 13, 1966 (1966-02-13) (age 45)
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Occupation Journalist, Science Writer
Years active 1980–present
Website
movingimages.wordpress.com[1]


[2]Nalaka Gunawardene was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka, in February 1966. Trained as a science writer, he has worked as a journalist, broadcaster and development communicator since 1987.[3]

He initially worked as a science journalist in Sri Lanka's English language newspapers, and also freelanced for radio and television. After winning three national awards for outstanding science journalism, he moved on to the development sector, where he worked as a editorial consultant, journalist trainer and communication advisor.

In 1996, he co-founded TVE Asia Pacific[4], a Colombo-based regional not-for-profit media foundation communicating sustainable development issues through TV, video and the web. As its Director since 2002, he has scripted, directed, produced or executive produced several dozen Asian and global documentaries, including Children_of_Tsunami:_No_More_Tears (2005).[5]. In 2006, he called for media content on poverty and development to be recognised as a 'copyright free zone' to enhance their secondary use for public education purposes. [6]

He is the author/editor of several technical books related to science, technology and development, most recently Communicating Disasters: An Asia Pacific Resource Book[7] (TVEAP/UNDP, 2007). He was part of the British and South Asian team of researchers associated with the Media South Asia Project that studied the nature of the satellite television revolution which began in the early 1990s and transformed South Asian societies and cultures. [8] [9]

He is especially known for his analytical writing on the impact of Information and communication technologies for development[10] (ICTs) on developing Asian societies. From 2003 to 2008, he was Contributing Editor (Sri Lanka) of the bi-annual regional survey Digital Review of Asia Pacific[11], and co-authored National Human Development Report – Promoting ICT for Human Development in Sri Lanka Report (UNDP, 2004). [12]

He is a regular speaker or panelist at international conferences on public communication of science and technology, development journalism, public interest broadcasting and ICT for development. He has been on juries at leading international documentary film festivals. Most recently, he was a juror for the International Digital Emmy Awards[13] 2011, presented in Cannes, France on 4 April 2011. [14]

He is on the Board of Directors of Panos South Asia[15], and a Trustee of the Science and Development Network[16] in the UK.

References

External links

Communicating Disasters book, co-edited in 2007 [2]



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