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The making of an African public sphere : the performance of the Kenyan daily press during the change to multi-party politics.Mak'Ochieng, Murej Otieno. January 2000 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2000.
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The role of the press in political conflicts in Kenya : a case study of the performance of the nation and the East African Standard NewspapersNyambuga, Charles Ongadi January 2011 (has links)
This study focuses on the role of the press in violent political conflicts in Kenya in the period that preceded the 2005 referendum on the draft constitution. Based on media reports, six major thematic areas of concern emerged during constitution making. These were: land tenure, devolution of power, the executive, the legislature, the Bill of Rights, and the provincial administration. These sections of the draft constitution caused a remarkable divergence of opinion. The citizens either supported or opposed the draft constitution on the basis of how the draft had treated those sections in the draft constitution. Besides the major thematic areas, newspapers regularly focused and reported on ethnicity, violence, political leaders‟ utterances, the process of constitution making, and political conflicts. Three main objectives guided the study. The first objective focused on the relationship between media content and different levels of political conflict. The influence of media content and how these may have led to high political conflict, medium political conflict, low political conflict and no political conflict, are tested in this study. The second objective highlighted the kind of coverage that the draft constitution got during the period that preceded the referendum in November, 2005. This objective facilitated interrogation of media content and whether media content focused on aspects of the draft constitution such as land ownership, the executive, devolution, the legislature and religion, as highlighted in the draft constitution of Kenya 2005. The third objective examined the thematic emphasis that the media undertook in the period that preceded the referendum. The themes that were dominant in the period before the referendum could have impacted on readers' perceptions of the critical issues that could have informed the voters' decisions. Three primary questions were addressed in the study: Firstly, was there a link between media content and different levels of political conflict in weak democracies such as Kenya? Secondly, did media content influence ethnicity and did it encourage ethnic conflict in diverse societies? Finally, what were the key thematic areas of coverage by the press, and how were they used during the referendum? In order to study these research objectives, I used a combination of theories to enhance understanding of the interplay between media content and audience in the society. The theories are: agenda setting, two-step flow, priming, framing, and the public sphere. The study adopts a triangulation convergence design in mixed- methods research that involves both qualitative and quantitative methods. A structured questionnaire and content analysis were used to seek responses to the research questions of the study and to meet the stated objectives. The research revealed that the two newspapers under investigation, namely the East African Standard and the Nation, provided more coverage to issues that were not central to the content of the draft constitution, such as political leaders' utterances, violence, ethnicity, and the process of constitution making. This showed that the newspapers tended to sensationalise issues instead of providing objective coverage of political matters. These newspapers used their opinion pages to educate their readers on how the referendum was turning violent. The theme of political leaders' utterances is closely linked to that of violence. This suggests that the violence was influenced by some of the leaders' statements. These utterances, and more so those that touched on ethnicity, could therefore have been a potential cause of the ensuing political conflicts during the 2005 referendum on the draft constitution. The findings reveal that newspaper editors tended to focus on political conflict at the expense of the actual content of the draft constitution. This would have provided insight and knowledge on the document and avoided sensational reporting, which could have contributed to violent political conflicts during the period that preceded the referendum on the draft constitution of Kenya.
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Normative media theory and the rethinking of the role of the Kenyan media in a changing social economic contextUgangu, Wilson 06 February 2013 (has links)
This thesis, titled “Normative Media Theory and the Rethinking of the Role of
the Kenyan Media in a Changing Social Economic Context,” is a theoretical
study that discusses the role of normative media theory in shaping and guiding
debate on the role of the media and attendant policy making processes in a
changing Kenyan social economic context. This is done against the background
of acknowledgment of the general state of flux that characterizes normative
media theory in a postmodern, globalized and new media landscape.
The study thus extensively describes the Kenyan media landscape, with a view
to demonstrating how it has and is continuing to be transformed by a variety of
developments in the social economic set up of the Kenyan society. In order to
provide a theoretical basis for explaining these developments, the study then
indulges in an extensive theoretical discussion that presents a synthesis of
current arguments in the area of normative media theory. This discussion
fundamentally brings to the fore the challenges which characterizes normative
media theory in a changing social economic context and therefore the inability of
traditional normative theory to account for new developments in the media and
society in general. In an attempt to integrate normative media theory and practice, the study then
discusses (against the backdrop of theory) the views and opinions of key role
players in the Kenyan media landscape, in regard to how they perceive the role
of the media. Particular attention is given, inter alia, to matters such as media
ownership, media accountability processes, changing media and communication
technologies, a changing constitutional landscape, the role of the government in
the Kenyan media landscape, the place of African moral philosophy in explaining
the role of the media in Kenya, and the growth of local language radio. Finally, on the bases of theory, experiences from other parts of the world and the
views of key role players in the Kenyan media landscape, the study presents
several normative guidelines on how normative theory and media policy making in Kenya could meet each other, taking into account the changes occasioned by
globalization and the new media landscape. These proposals are essentially
made to enrich general debate on the role of the media in Kenya, as well as
attendant media policy making efforts. / Communication / D.Litt. et Phil. (Communication)
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An investigation into how journalists experience economic and political pressures on their ethical decisions at the Nation Media Group in KenyaMaweu, Jacinta Mwende January 2013 (has links)
This study investigates how journalists experience economic and political pressures on their ethical decisions at the Nation Media Group (NMG) conglomerate in Kenya. The study uses qualitative semi- structured interviews to examine how journalists experience these pressures on their professional ethics as they make their daily decisions. Grounded in the critical political economy of the media tradition, the findings of the study indicate that economic and political pressures from advertisers, shareholders’ interests, the profit motive and the highly ethnicised political environment in Kenya largely compromise the ethical decisions of journalists. The study draws on the work done by Herman and Chomsky in their ‘Propaganda Model’ in which they propose ‘filters’ as the analytical indicators of the forms that political and economic pressures that journalists experience may take. The study explores the ways in which journalists experience these pressures, how they respond to the pressures and the ways in which their responses may compromise their journalism ethics. The findings indicate that aside from the pressures from the primary five filters outlined in the Propaganda Model, ethnicity in Kenyan newsrooms is a key ‘filter’ that may compromise the ethical decisions of journalists at the NMG. The study therefore argues that there is a need to modify the explanatory power of the Propaganda Model when applying it to the Kenyan context to include ethnicity as a ‘sixth filter’ that should be understood in relation to the five primary filters. From the findings, it would seem that the government is no longer a major threat to journalists’ freedom and responsibility in Kenya. Market forces and ethnicity in newsrooms pose the greatest threat to journalists’ freedom and responsibility. The study therefore calls for a revision of the normative framework within which journalists’ and media performance in Kenya is assessed. As the study findings show, the prevailing liberal- democratic model ignores the commercial and economic threats the ‘free market’ poses to journalism ethics as well as ethnicity in newsrooms and only focuses on the media- government relations, treating the government as the major threat to media freedom.
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Normative media theory and the rethinking of the role of the Kenyan media in a changing social economic contextUgangu, Wilson 06 February 2013 (has links)
This thesis, titled “Normative Media Theory and the Rethinking of the Role of
the Kenyan Media in a Changing Social Economic Context,” is a theoretical
study that discusses the role of normative media theory in shaping and guiding
debate on the role of the media and attendant policy making processes in a
changing Kenyan social economic context. This is done against the background
of acknowledgment of the general state of flux that characterizes normative
media theory in a postmodern, globalized and new media landscape.
The study thus extensively describes the Kenyan media landscape, with a view
to demonstrating how it has and is continuing to be transformed by a variety of
developments in the social economic set up of the Kenyan society. In order to
provide a theoretical basis for explaining these developments, the study then
indulges in an extensive theoretical discussion that presents a synthesis of
current arguments in the area of normative media theory. This discussion
fundamentally brings to the fore the challenges which characterizes normative
media theory in a changing social economic context and therefore the inability of
traditional normative theory to account for new developments in the media and
society in general. In an attempt to integrate normative media theory and practice, the study then
discusses (against the backdrop of theory) the views and opinions of key role
players in the Kenyan media landscape, in regard to how they perceive the role
of the media. Particular attention is given, inter alia, to matters such as media
ownership, media accountability processes, changing media and communication
technologies, a changing constitutional landscape, the role of the government in
the Kenyan media landscape, the place of African moral philosophy in explaining
the role of the media in Kenya, and the growth of local language radio. Finally, on the bases of theory, experiences from other parts of the world and the
views of key role players in the Kenyan media landscape, the study presents
several normative guidelines on how normative theory and media policy making in Kenya could meet each other, taking into account the changes occasioned by
globalization and the new media landscape. These proposals are essentially
made to enrich general debate on the role of the media in Kenya, as well as
attendant media policy making efforts. / Communication / D.Litt. et Phil. (Communication)
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