Democratic Voice of Burma
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Democratic Voice of Burma
Summary
Democratic Voice of Burma is a non-governmental organization[1]. It draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (non_governmental_organization category, ranking #93 of 417).[2]
Key Facts
- Democratic Voice of Burma's field of work was Myanmar[3].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's field of work was news media[4].
- Democratic Voice of Burma received the Dawit Isaak award[5].
- Democratic Voice of Burma was a member of Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union[6].
- Democratic Voice of Burma is in the country of Norway[7].
- Democratic Voice of Burma is in the country of Thailand[8].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's instance of is recorded as non-governmental organization[9].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's instance of is recorded as media company[10].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's headquarters location is recorded as Oslo[11].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's headquarters location is recorded as Chiang Mai[12].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 20149106352268492809[13].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's GND ID is recorded as 1086276205[14].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no2010152044[15].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no2010145924[16].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/06_m10[17].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's official website is recorded as https://burmese.dvb.no/[18].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's official website is recorded as https://english.dvb.no/[19].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's BIBSYS ID is recorded as 10013361[20].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's Canadiana Name Authority ID is recorded as ncf11134614[21].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007402570705171[22].
- Democratic Voice of Burma's Yale LUX ID is recorded as group/d4ccf3e0-497b-4611-bf8c-90c5c54027c1[23].
Body
Operations
Headquarters locations include Oslo[11], a big city[24], in Norway[25], founded in 1048[26] and Chiang Mai[12], a thesaban nakhon[27], in Thailand[28], founded in 1201[29].
Industry
Fields of work include Myanmar[3], a sovereign state[30], in Myanmar[31], founded in 1948[32] and news media[4], a type of mass media[33].
Recognition
Democratic Voice of Burma received the Dawit Isaak award[5].
Why It Matters
Democratic Voice of Burma draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (non_governmental_organization category, ranking #93 of 417).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]
FAQs
What awards did Democratic Voice of Burma receive?
Honors received include Dawit Isaak award[5].