"Despite the generalizations and stereotypes that are often used to describe Africa in popular (and journalistic) discourses, the continent's diversity escapes easy categorization or glib narratives of either the 'Hopeless Continent' or 'Africa Rising' variety - the two poles between which the Economist's coverage has veered in recent years. Africa is a continent after all, not a country (as the blog www.africasacountry.com so splendidly keeps reminding us in its coverage of the variety of African media and culture). This variety applies to journalism on the continent as well. Africa's journalism is delivered across a wide range of platforms, from legacy media such as newspapers (which do not quite share the same rapid decline as their counterparts in the mediasaturated North) and radio (still the pervasive medium on the continent), to the citizen journalism found in the rapidly growing number of online and mobile platforms. This issue of Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies includes research pertaining to the variety of platforms and practices of journalism in Africa, and how the media continue to evolve, merge and mutate." (Introduction)
The variety of platforms and practices in African journalism / Herman Wasserman, 1
Citizen journalism / Bruce Mutsvairo, Simon Columbus and Iris Leijendekker, 4
Four-country newspaper framing of Barack Obama’s multiracial identity in the 2008 US election / Kioko Ireri, 23
Reimagining the Kenyan television broadcasting space: Active User Generated Content (AUGC) / Anthony Terah Ambala, 39
The re-emergence of diasporic radio in Zimbabwe / Everette Ndlovu, 54
The political economic history of the introduction of television in Kenya / George King’ara, 73
Democratising the media in Ghana and Nigeria / Ufuoma Akpojivi, 86
Whose media, whose agenda? Monitoring the Malawi 2014 tripartite elections / Ivor Gaber and Edrinnie Lora-Kayambazinthu, 104