The Center for Inter-disciplinary Inquiry and Innovation in Sexual and Reproductive Health (Ci3) at the University of Chicago will get a $1 million grant for the next two years from the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, an official said on Wednesday.
Ci3’s newly launched Transmedia Story
Lab (TSL) will collaborate with leading non-governmental organisations
in Lucknow to train them in novel, youth-friendly data collection
techniques.
Together with their community partners,
Ci3 will conduct workshops with Lucknow youth aged 15-24 using games,
storytelling and art to learn more about the daily lives of young people
to better understand the social determinants of adolescent reproductive
health and well being.
Digital storytelling will anchor the project.
Digital stories are short, first person
documentaries produced with music, images and narratives of young people
communicating their daily lives, hopes and dreams.
The storytelling methodology helps to
paint a rich portrait of the lives of young people living in urban
slums, enhance the field’s understanding of gender and social norms and
create new insights for improving adolescent sexual and reproductive
health and reducing the unmet need for family planning.
Workshops will be accompanied by
interviews with policy makers, non-governmental organisations, parents
and healthcare providers.
In the second year, Ci3 will create a
small grants programme to invest in young people’s ideas on how best to
advance the lives of girls in India.
This project also reflects Ci3’s
commitment to developing novel partnerships. Ci3 will work with the
University of Chicago alumnus Sandeep Ahuja MPP ’06, director of
Operation ASHA, an international leader in tuberculosis (TB)
eradication.
Operation ASHA is known for its innovative approaches and outcome-oriented research.
Ci3 recently launched Transmedia Story
Lab which builds upon South Side Stories, a two-year project funded by
the Ford Foundation.
Culminating in the summer of 2014, South
Side Stories chronicled and digitally archived stories that countered
dominant narratives about African- American adolescent’s sexuality.
Founded in 2012, Ci3 is a
University-wide centre established to empower young people and remove
policy and systemic barriers to sexual and reproductive health and well
being.
Ci3 develops novel interventions using
technology, games and narrative in collaboration with youth, partner
organisations and University faculty.