D. Tabbaa
Department of Public Health, Faculty of veterinary medicine, Al Baath University, Hama, Syria
Abstract
Humanity faces many challenges that require global solutions. One of these challenges is the spread of infectious diseases that emerge (or re-emerge) from the interfaces between animals and humans and the ecosystems in which they live. This is a result of several trends, including the exponential growth in human and livestock populations, rapid urbanization, rapidly changing farming systems, closer integration between livestock and wildlife, forest encroachment, changes in ecosystems and globalization of trade in animal and animal products.
Media sector informs the populace without bias. It acts as an anchor for many facets of a society and supports its fundamental workings, bringing out the positives and negatives of industry, making citizens’ voices audible to decision makers and most importantly, revealing and spreading economic and other information.
Media cannot serve its purpose unless it reaches across the whole population, and the majority understands it and uses it as critical source of information. The three most critical attributes of an effective media sector are independence, quality and reach. These benchmarks ensure that information is reported without fear of government and other interest groups, views are expressed from a wide variety of perspectives, and media has the capacity to produce political, social, and economic information for all segments of the society.
As Arab countries strive for sustainable development, press freedom and the broader issue of democratization of communication has become primary concerns to stakeholders interested in improving development and governance (Arab Spring), which refers to the empowerment of people to seek not only their own self-improvement but also the
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