This page has been launched for cultural-educational activities.
Although its contents are mostly the product of the site owner's work, but
Spaces for the reflection of different voices have been honored in it.
This page has just been launched; We are working to complete it soon.
Thank you for patient.
It was more than a decade that I was a university teaching chair, and I enjoyed sharing what I knew with my students. Every morning when I went to university, I didn't feel like I was going to work; I thought I left my small house to join my big family. But one day, when the passage of time took the opposite direction, everything went wrong. Our intimate atmosphere disappeared, and the members of this big family were scattered in different places. In this unfortunate situation, I thought virtual space could reduce this created gap - although it does not compensate -. Therefore, I decided to open a gate to be together again by creating this virtual page. I created this page to continue sharing my experiences and information with journalists and communication activists because this is one of my social responsibilities. In order to achieve social equality, we need freedom of speech and free space for dialogue, so by creating this page, I tried to make a small point about it.
Although, according to the current needs, my activities on this page are focused on crisis journalism, I also presented educational content in the fields of news writing and photojournalism, as well as a number of scientific research articles in the field of communication that were not available to the public until now. I also added it to this page.
Currently, this site covers limited parts of media work due to time and facility limitations, but hopefully, with the support and constructive comments of its companions, this small start will lay the groundwork for bigger works for a brighter future.
This work is funded by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) through a project entitled ‘Placement, Preservation and Perseverance: Afghan at-risk Scholars, Students and Activists’ (PPP). The funding and supervision of this project are based in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University.”