Development journalism in Africa : capitulation of the fourth estate?
This paper traces the historical underpinnings of development journalism. It argues that, like the ideology of development which is its raison d'etre, development journalism, though a welcome departure from Western mass media paradigms, lacks organic relevance to make it a legitimate professional pursuit for sub-Saharan African journalists. This is because 'development' no longer evokes patriotism in the present socio-political environment of the region. The paper also postulates that historical factors, political and economic mismanagement, and international economic and ideological interests have played major roles in stultifying sub-Saharan Africa's development thereby (a) limiting the capacity of its journalists to play meaningful roles in society, and (b) hampering the development of mass media in the region.
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- In Collections
-
Africa Media Review
- Copyright Status
- In Copyright
- Date Published
-
1991
- Authors
-
Odhiambo, Lewis O.
- Material Type
-
Articles
- Publishers
-
Institute for Communication Development and Research (African Council on Communication Education)
- Language
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English
- Pages
- Pages 17-30
- ISSN
- 0258-4913
- Permalink
- https://n2t.net/ark:/85335/m50r9q61s