Caitlin Cohen wins the prestigious Huntington Public Service Award
Sunday, June 1, 2008
http://www.nationalgridus.com/commitment/d4-1_award.asp
FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
HUNTINGTON AWARD TO ASSIST BROWN
UNIVERSITY GRADUATE
TO USE RADIO TO
FACILITATE COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN GOVERNMENT
OFFICIALS AND SLUM DWELLERS IN
MALI
Caitlin Lee
Cohen, a recent graduate of Brown University
and resident of Westminster Station, Vermont,
has received a $10,000 Samuel Huntington Public
Service Award to develop a series of radio
programs to facilitate communications between
government officials and slum dwellers in Mali.
The award is named in honor of the late
president and chief executive officer of the
former New England Electric System, now
National Grid.
Cohen
co-founded the Mali Health Organizing Project
in Mali in 2005 and has lived in Mali for over
a year working on that project. She will
build on that experience with a new project,
also directed to Mali. As she explains,
93% of Mali's urban population lives in slums
(UN-Habitat), where residents face crippling
poverty and little or no access to water,
sanitation, healthcare, or education. The
root cause of this underdevelopment is the
deadlock between slum residents and their
government.
Cohen
will address this deadlock and bring the slum
residents' voices into the public arena via
radio. Specifically, she will produce a
series of interactive radio programs called
Rajo Bamako: An Bee Ta Donī (Radio Bamako: It
Belongs to Us Allī), which will bring
government officials and citizens together to
address topics such as sanitation, roadway
infrastructure and safety, health and education
for children, land rights, taxation and
governmental accountability, and other
governmental services. The radio programs
will include coverage of success stories and
problems, direct interviews with officials and
slum dwellers, music, call-ins, and
dramatizations. The goals of the program
are to increase civility in society, improve
communications between governmental officials
and slum dwellers, and help citizens exercise
their rights. Following the initial
series of programs, Cohen will complete a
survey and seek to produce new episodes based
on that experience.
After
her public service, Cohen will enter Brown
University Medical School starting in the Fall
of 2009 to pursue a medical degree with a
specialty in infectious diseases.
About the
Award
The Public Service Award, now in its
20th year, was created in memory of Samuel
Huntington who died in 1988. Huntington
was an advocate of public service, having spent
a year in Nigeria teaching science and
mathematics. The award, funded
by
colleagues, family and friends at National
Grid, offers grants to graduating college
seniors on the basis of their academic records,
personal accomplishments and their proposal for
a public service project anywhere in the
world.
National Grid is
an international energy delivery business with
principal activities in the regulated
electricity and natural gas industries. In the
U.S., National Grid delivers electricity and
natural gas to customers in Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New York, and Rhode
Island.
