"Community Radio is still nascent in Bangladesh while in India it has completed a decade and in Nepal it has existed in its myriad forms without a policy for much longer [...] The existence or non-existence of a guiding national CR policy plays an important role in determining the kind of Community Radio being sustained in the country. The policy has impacted the kinds of institution that is eligible to establish Community Radio as well as the kind of institutions the Community Radios themselves are evolving into. The practices at the stations in the three countries are quite diverse with CR stations in Nepal having a slight edge over those in India and Bangladesh from the point of having evolved as ‘media’ organizations’ rather than as ‘development’ organizations. Communities in all three countries are conceived of as geographic communities and not as communities of interest. All stations work on principles of not for profit in India and Bangladesh where as the underlying principles in Nepal seems to be community shareholding at least in the CR stations that were part of the study." (Conclusions, page 33)
Executive Summary, 7
1 Background and Introduction, 9
2 Research Methodology and Data, 10
3 Desk Research, 12
4 Analysis Design, 14
5 Key Findings, 15
Financial Sustainability -- Social Sustainability -- Institutional Sustainability
6 Conclusions, 33
7 Constraints and Challenges, 36
Annexure 38
Sample English Weekly Diary -- Template for Significant Good Practice Stories -- Sample Mind Map Data -- CR and Sustainability Questionnaire -- Sample of Coded Weekly Diary