Join the Women’s International Perspective (WIP) global network of women writers. The WIP is a new international website which tells news from women’s perspective, and more. Find out how you can apply.

Journalists from Southeast Asia can now apply for the Southeast Asian Press Alliance’s (SEAPA) 2007 Journalism Fellowship Programme, a three-week writing scholarship. Find out how you can apply.

Two international media organisations invite nominations for their prestigious awards for excellent work in the field of journalism and investigative reporting. Find out how you can nominate.

In 2006, the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC) Women's International Network Asia Pacific conducted an email survey among women community radio broadcasters in the Asia Pacific as regards their situation and needs. Out of the 23 respondents from 12 different countries in the region, 18 are women.

The Tactical Technology Collective has launched the next edition in its NGO-in-a-box series, the Open Publishing Box. The Open Publishing edition of NGO-in-a-box is a toolkit of free and open source software, tutorials and guides for producing, publishing, and distributing content. The edition, produced by Tactical Tech in collaboration with iCommons, is aimed at small to medium sized non-profits, independent media organisations, free culture creators, and grassroots journalists with a particular emphasis on those in developing and transition countries.

Sexuality Policy Watch (SPW) has just launched its new website. Aside from up-to-date information about SPW's programs and activities, the website contains links to relevant sites that provide analysis and data on a gamut of research and advocacy initiatives from around the world that are engaged with sexuality, health, and human rights work at both global and local levels.

SPW is a global forum composed of researchers and activists from a wide range of countries and regions of the world. It was constituted in 2002 as the International Working Group on Sexuality and Social Policy (IWGSSP). In August 2006, in a meeting in Toronto, SPW decided to adopt its current name so as to more precisely project the image of who they are and what they do.

For more information, visit Sexuality Policy Watch website at <http://www.sxpolitics.org>.