Foundation for Media Alternatives


The is as a non-government organization formed in 1986. Since its founding, FMA has "sought to enhance the popularization and social marketing of development-oriented issues and campaigns through media-related interventions, social communication projects, and cultural work."' It is a member of the Association for Progressive Communications.
FMA has worked in producing the public affairs television show, development-oriented video-documentaries. It has also been involved in song-writing festivals. Apart from this the FMA has been part of advocacy campaigns, and various publications to support different civil society organisations.
After the Internet took root and grew in the Philippines, FMA and others working in parallel fields increasingly felt that information and communication technologies would be "the New Media or tool that will enable fellow civil society organizations to improve their respective processes, information sharing, collaboration, and in the long run allow them to achieve their respective visions."
From 1997, FMA streamlined its services and programmes — in both the traditional and New Media — and undertook "strategic interventions" in campaigns for the right to information and right to communicate. FMA says it has also "focused on democratizing Information and Communications Technologies, aimed at empowering Philippine civil society through the critical use of appropriate new media." In 2011, its activities include developing a framework and pilot testing an "Open E-Governance Index", supporting the 'MDG3: Take Back the Tech! To End Violence Against Women' project being undertaken globally by the APC and working with Privacy International to analyse digital privacy issues in the Philippines
Some of its mission goals include assisting civil society organisations in "asserting the people's right to information and the right to communicate through the democratization of appropriate media resources and services to the greatest number".