BRIS (Children’s Rights in Society) is a children’s rights NGO running the national helpline for children in Sweden, co-funded by the European Commission. For the fourth consecutive year, BRIS has published The Children, BRIS and IT 2010. The report concerns BRIS as an actor on the Internet, and young people’s contacts with BRIS about the Internet, computers and mobile phones.
Is television really harmful to the youngest children? In what ways have the Internet habits of Swedish toddlers changed during the 2000s decade? How much television does Chilean pre-schoolers watch? How did the Lord of the Ring trilogy affect children’s television in New Zealand? These questions and more are answered in the new anthology The Emerging Media Toddlers.
The Media Council is the Swedish Safer Internet Centre in Insafe, a European network of e-safety awareness. The Public Report for 2009 describes the Council's initiatives and activities within the EU campaign The Young Internet, the media coverage as well as planned activities for 2010.
Children and youth’s activities and creativities on the Internet were in focus in a unique collaboration between leading organisations in Sweden during Safer Internet Day on February 9, 2010. Schools, organisations, corporations, authorities, media were among those invited to participate. The purpose of Safer Internet Day is to create a dialogue between children, youths and adults about children and youths’ activities on the Internet and what their social life looks like online.
The City of Karlstad in Sweden hosts the World Summit on Media for Children and Youth June 14–18, 2010. The theme is “Towards a new global vision for children and media - challenges in young people's world of communication”. The programme include more than 140 sessions with a focus on children, youth and media and the Swedish Media Council is contributing with four seminars.
In an attempt to communicate the safer Internet message directly to youth, the Swedish Media Council has produced three animated films that will be spread online primarily through social media sites. The films are in English and free to network members to use and distribute.
The report See Me (Se Mig) is a study among young people between 13 and 25 years of age on their experiences of, and attitudes towards, sexual exploitation via interactive media. The study shows that young people are often exposed to sexual elements online. 30% of all 16-25 year olds report that someone has tried to get them to talk about sex, send pictures or do something they didn’t want to do in front of a web-camera.
SR International/Radio Sweden reported on Safer Internet Day in Stockholm fromDigital Tourist - one of the Swedish Media Council’s activities. The reporter, Dave Russell, interviewed Ann Katrin Agebäck, Director of the Swedish Media Council, Elza Dunkels, a researcher at Umeå university, and a 19 year old student.
Digital Tourist is a conference tour organized by the Swedish Media Council, the Swedish Safer Internet Centre, together with the Swedish Ministry of Culture. During a conference day the participants will learn what children and young people - the digital natives - do online. The conference series will tour Sweden with five stops, where the first one was held on December 9, 2009, in Södertälje, outside of Stockholm. The Swedish Minister for Culture, Lena Adelsohn Liljeroth, is giving the opening speech on all occations.
The Swedish Ministry of Culture hosted the EU presidency conference Promoting a Creative Generation – Children and Young People in the New Culture and Media Landscape on 29-30 July, 2009, at Svenska Mässan in Gothenburg, Sweden. The Media Council participated in the coference among over 350 other experts, practitioners and policymakers from around 30 countries. The conference consisted of seminars and a panel discussions.
Kulturdepartementet, 103 33 Stockholm Besöksadress: Karlavägen 100
Telefon: 08-405 10 00 E-post: info[a]medieradet.se
www.medierådet.se www.youtube.com/medieradet