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Internet radio "broadcasting" in South Africa.Penzhorn, Cara. January 1999 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.Mus.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1999.
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Developing a business model for a community radio station in Port Elizabeth: a case studyNgcezula, Anthony Thamsanqa "Delite" January 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this treatise is a development of a suitable model for a community radio station which would lead to operational effectiveness and ensure sustainability. The treatise has three phases namely a theoretical phase, a narration phase and an integration phase. Firstly, in the theoretical phase the research study investigates what the literature review reveals about community radio stations and business models. This treatise argues that a total dependency of community radio stations on donor funding leads to operational ineffectiveness which threatens their sustainability. The treatise also argues that a business model could be adapted for a community radio station by identifying the business issues which the literature review revealed, and use these to deconstruct a theoretical business model. Secondly, in the narrative phase the research study investigates the important business issues for a selected community radio station. The treatise argues the board and management of this selected community radio station revealed additional business issues of operations and gave different ratings to business issues which are important in their operations. Thirdly, in the integration phase, the theoretical model deconstructed in the theoretical phase, was revised by including additional business issues of operations revealed in the narrative phase. The research study concludes that this revised model is a suitable business model for a community radio station and can lead to operational effectiveness and ensure sustainability.
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Impact of an increase of the local content quota on radio broadcastersMaqina, Bandile Chumani January 2013 (has links)
With the ever growing disenfranchisement of musicians and artist in the in ability of government entities to enforce stricter and favourable music quota which aim to increase the consumption of local music by increasing the current music quota as it stands from 25 percent to at least 60 percent for commercial radio, with more and more musicians calling for an increase in the current quota. In an open letter to the then Minister of Arts and Culture, Mr Pallo Jordan from the South African Music Quota Committee (SAMQC) (Oct 2007) they voiced their concerns: “The SA content quota of 25 percent for commercial radio is not only too low, it is also often meaningless, because The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) allows stations to include gig guides, interviews and promotions as part of their local quota. You state, and we agree, that “cultural industries are serious business”. The structures protecting the national interest in iron, minerals, fishing, sport and many other areas are strongly enforced and defended here in South Africa. Why not our music?” More initiatives such as the “Play Local of Die” campaign whose aim is to urge commercial broadcasters to increase their local content with regards to commercial radios stations playlist was launched by South African Hip Hop artist commonly known as JR (Real Name: JR Bogopa) to further exhibit the South African musicians plight in how pivotal it is to their careers and overall financial well-being that the current quota be raised significantly. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of local content quota on domestic radio broadcasters in South Africa. The population for this study included 100 radio station which broadcast in the republic of South Africa. The response rate for the e-mail questionnaire was 100 percent of the 100 respondents. A Likert-type scale instrument consisted of 39 questions divided into two sections: Section one looked at the demographic profile of the respondents and section two focused on getting responses on the factors impacting local content quotaand domestic broadcasters, namely local content quota, implications for domestic broadcasters, revenue streams, impact on local musicians, governments role in local content quota, success factors, globalisation and piracy. In order to realise the purpose of this study, the following research design was used: Step 1 A literature review was conducted to determine the various factors impacting local artists, local broadcasters and local content quota. Step 2 A questionnaire was composed according to the principles and guidelines in steps 1. Step 3 Empirical data was obtained with the aid of an e-mail survey. Step 4 The results of the data were analysed and interpreted. Step 5 The empirical results were integrated with Step 3. Step 6 Conclusions and recommendations were completed. The main findings from the study were: The study revealed that the radio industry is not unanimous in the call from artists for government to increase the local content quota and thus prefer that the current status quo continue. That local content quota are not the only way to curb the South African music industry‟s woes, artists should seek to maximise their revenue by exploiting the infinite avenues for revenue that globalisation avails.
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Multifaceted broadcasting : an analysis into Lotus FM's role and identity as a "national public service-cum-commercial broadcaster with community responsibility".Kaihar, Sunita. January 2001 (has links)
Radio broadcasting is usually classified as either a public broadcasting service or as being commercially driven. In the South African context, the concept of community radio has further complicated the definition of a public broadcasting service. While profit motivation and niche marketing characterize a radio driven by commercial means, community radio is predominantly non-profit oriented, directed towards a particular community. A public broadcasting service is, amongst other elements, typified as being geographically accessible to all and of paying particular attention to minority groups. Lotus FM, a radio station that came into existence on 16 January 1983, for the South African Indian community, describes itself as a "national public service-cum-commercial broadcaster with community responsibility". The South African Indian community, a
minority group within the broader South African population, comprises of five language groups (Hindi, Gujarati, Urdu, Tamil and Telegu) and three religious groupings (Hinduism, Islam and Christianity). This research aims to explore the feasibility with which Lotus FM is accommodating the conflicting interests of being a melange of all three forms of broadcasting and reflecting it via its programmes. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2001.
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Community radio as a pulpit.Feyissa, Kebede. January 1999 (has links)
All over the world - except underdeveloped countries - many religious congregations worship in 'electronic churches'. This represents one of the 20th century's great religious achievements. Societies have become the comfortable beneficiaries of their newly invented technologies. However, since 1995 the phenomenon of FM community radio has been growing rapidly. It has become a new way to meet the public service communication need for entertainment, education and information in a very professional way. Religious community radio stations are a new and growing mode of transmission, and the object of this research is to highlight the development and growth of the religious community radio as a better way of providing communication services to religious groups. All churches and religious groups take it for granted that mass media have a role in the erosion of religious values. Yet they also proclaim that mass media provide the only means to reach out behind atomic individuals' closed doors, communicating intimately with the millions souls in that universe. My research uses the example of a South African community radio station, Radio Khwezi at Kwasizabantu Mission, to show (i) how a religious group has managed to create a viable non-denominational community service; and (ii) that regulatory and operational problems can be overcome in a suitable environment of regulation. I conclude that there is no need for mainstream religious groups to feel threatened by electronic media, that the mass media are an extension of the good tidings of the kingdom of the Lord. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1999.
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Community radio : the beat that develops the soul of the people? : a case study of XK fm as a SABC owned community radio station and its role as a facilitator of community based development.Hart, Thomas Bongani. January 2011 (has links)
This study is concerned with the potential of a community radio station under the ownership of the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) in being a facilitator and social actor of community-based development. XK fm is a radio station run by members of the !Xun and Khwe (two ethnic San communities), but owned and governed by the SABC. It was established to preserve and protect the cultures, languages and histories of the two communities as well acting as a facilitating and promoter of development. The focus of this research is on the examination of the station‘s day-to-day development programmes, the processes involved in operation,
production and transmission of these programmes and the outcomes of these processes in the reception of the programmes among the two communities. As a means of critically analyzing the multi-layered aspects of operations within the radio station and the listening habits of its
audiences as a whole, this study is situated within a Circuit of Culture (du Gay et al, 1997) framework of theory. It is also based on a case study approach of methodology that utilizes ethnographic methods of data collection from semi-structured and in-depths interviews to passive and participant observations that have been recorded on video. Based on the principles of both forms of development radio broadcasting, this study concludes that XK fm has been successful in utilizing indigenous knowledge and culture to produce radio programming that is sensitive to the development needs of the !Xun and Khwe communities. It has created awareness of development issues through both its cultural programmes and it informational programmes, and through the SABC has been enabled to be productively sustainable, technically advanced and participatory in nature. However, the SABC‘s control over the station does limit the two communities‘ ownership of the station and participation in policy construction, thus constraining the station in more effectively acting as a community radio station. It suggests that XK fm cannot act alone as the sole facilitator of development and needs other mechanisms to enhance participation and effective dialectical information exchange such as radio listening clubs. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.
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Masculinity in Muslim media: a case study of Radio IslamDadi Patel, Aaisha January 2018 (has links)
A dissertation submitted in full fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts by Research in Media Studies, Department of Media Studies, Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, February 2018 / This project examines the ways in which Radio Islam, a South African community radio station,
constructs masculinity in the South African Indian Muslim community. This community is its
largest audience. The radio station is strongly influenced by the ideologies and rulings of the
Jamiatul Ulama, an ideological body whose teachings stem from Indo-Pak interpretations of
Islam and with whom much of the South African Indian Muslim community align themselves.
The conflation of this culture and religion in this context results in patriarchal and misogynistic
teachings being repeated by this body without much questioning, resulting in the common
upliftment of men and confinement of women in the community to certain roles and spaces
only. Through the examination and discourse analysis of broadcasted content on Radio Islam
in three categories that have many gendered dynamics to them - hijab, marriage, and
Ramadan - this study aims to unpack the way in which masculinity is constructed, and the
extents to which these constructions then facilitate the entrenchment of patriarchy in the
broader South African Muslim community. / XL2018
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Africanising community radio broadcasting: the case of Vukani Community Radio (VCR) in South AfricaTyali, Siyasanga Mhlangabezi January 2017 (has links)
A thesis submitted to University of the Witwatersrand in fulfilment of the requirements for
the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Johannesburg, 2017 / Decolonisation and Africanisation of spaces emerging from administrative and settler
colonialism have been suggested as forms of challenging colonial legacies that are still
largely present in the Global South and particularly within the African continent. Mainly, this
has also been the case in recent South African discourses that have called for the
decolonisation and ‘transformation’ of key areas in the country to build a decolonised
African country of the future. This thesis, therefore, deals with the subject of the community
radio broadcasting sector that is operating during South Africa’s ‘postcolonial’ era, and the
steps undertaken by this sector in Africanising itself. Starting from the conviction that the
media has a historical role in shaping and communicating cultures as well as identities of the
colonised and ‘formerly’ colonised, the thesis posits that the community radio sector is one
of the vital arenas that can be used to understand the continuities and discontinuities of
colonial cultures in media institutions. Thus, to comprehend and establish the state of
Africanisation within the community radio sector of the country, the study investigated and
analysed the case of Vukani Community Radio (VCR); a community radio station that is
easily one of the oldest community orientated broadcasters in South Africa. Furthermore, to
challenge the idea of colonised and neo-colonised media spaces, this thesis was grounded
on an understanding of the complexities of Africanisation as a decolonising project in a
media institution that is operating in the post-settler-colonial administration of this country.
Adopting a case study approach, this study attempted to understand the urgency of a
broadcast media platform in asserting the cultures and identities of ‘previously’ colonised
Africans on the medium's airwaves. To make sense of the conceptual challenges
surrounding the study, the thesis has drawn on decolonial discourses, including the theory
of Afrocentricity, the coloniality of power, coloniality of knowledge, the coloniality of being
and the decolonial turn. The adoption of these theories by the study, therefore, also
demonstrates a conscious delinking of this study from the traditional theories of media and
cultural studies that have habitually underpinned the South African canon. Moreover, this
study has adopted the use of critical decolonised methodologies approach in the pursuit of
answers about the extent of Africanisation of the media institution. The decolonised
approach of the adopted method lay in revealing the colonial excesses that have
underpinned research methodologies as well as an ‘auto-critique’ of these excesses in the
context of this study. The data analysed to arrive at the findings of this study included
several macro and micro policy documents, a content analysis of three (3) categories of
community radio programmes [Talk Radio, African Cultural Lifestyle & News Programming]
that totalled 270 hours of community radio content. The study also relied on several semi
structured interviews with various internal and external stakeholders that make up the
station's key constituencies. In the analysis of evidence that would uncover the extent of the
Africanisation of the community radio station, the findings of the thesis revealed several yet
overlapping thematic areas that suggest pathways towards the Africanisation of the media
institution. These, among others, included the use of this media institution as an African
public sphere, its embracing of the philosophy of Ubuntu, its role in the decolonisation of
African memory and its approaches towards ethnicity and Africanity within the broadcasting
area. These themes emanating from the analysed data of the study also illustrate how this
media institution is operating as a pocket of resistance against colonial, neo-colonial and
imperialistic media cultures. In addition to these thematic areas, the findings of this study
also demonstrate that when only media policy documents are adopted, this can lead to
ambiguities in the pursuit of Africanisation as decolonisation. The study however also
demonstrates that the urgency of the community radio station in catering for the
surrounding constituency can potentially demonstrate an eventual Africanisation of the
airwaves. Finally, this study concludes that the Africanisation of the airwaves is
demonstrable at Vukani Community Radio (VCR) but its permanent enforcement is
dependent on the vigilance of the stations constituencies and how they define and enforce
the role of their media institution. / XL2018
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Community radio as dialogic and participatory : a critical analysis of governance, control and community participation, a case study of XK FM radio.Mhlanga, Brilliant. January 2006 (has links)
This study is based on an assessment of XK FM as a community radio station for the !XQ and Khwe ethnic communities. Various political under-currents and factors are examined: the refusal to accept the two groups as separate ethnic communities, the anomalous creation of XK FM as a community radio station under the auspices of SABC. This anomaly has created an ambiguity of what a community is within a community radio station, what are the historical and present complexities encompassed in considering the !XO and the Khwe as a single 'minority ethnic media community' and awarding them a radio licence, what is the nature and governance of community radio in general? The study followed a qualitative research paradigm whose epistemology IS phenomenological, using case study method, theories of the public sphere and ethnicity. According to this frame of reference XK FM radio station is seen as a case study of ethnic minority media.
Community radio is therefore described as the expression of a small population, and a third voice between the state and private commercial radio. It also has the ability to
correct the distortions inherent in the majority-controlled media by acting as the alternative media. The alternative element is associated with its potential to challenge the
establishment, and in giving people an independent voice which is often perceived as alternative and free speech. Us major characteristics are; independence, equality, community participation, and representation. XK FM as a community radio is likely to consolidate the sustenance of beliefs in collective will, participatory approach to communication and citizen input. This enhances language as both a means of communication and expression of cultural identity for the local communities. This study concludes that the lXQ and Khwe are two different ethnic
communities, with varied worldviews and aspirations. This assertions surmises that the issuing of the licence by ICASA merely focused on their cultural distinctiveness, and allowed for a localised form of public broadcasting, thereby entrenching ethnic cleavages most probably with the aim of manipulating the two communities. By implication, XK
FM is not a community radio station in the strict sense, but an extension of SABC in a decentralised version. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2006.
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A critical assessment of the role and governance of Muslim community radio in South Africa : the case of Radio Al-Ansaar.Mall, B. Ayesha. January 2006 (has links)
Community participation is a fundamental element of community radio. Therefore in
countries where this form of radio exists, community participation is one of its most
important licence criteria. It is no different in South Africa. Community radio in this
country is a relatively young form of radio, just over a decade old, and is based on
models in countries where community radio is a long established institution. Many of the
South African community radios are faith-based stations. However, existing research on
community participation in such radios are based mainly on Christian stations. The focus
of this paper is on Muslim community radio.
The study evaluated the extent of community participation in the ownership,
management, programming and other aspects at Radio Al-Ansaar, a Muslim community
radio based in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal. As this radio serves a Muslim constituency
characterised by ideological, racial and class divisions, the study sought to find out if
optimal and meaningful community participation from all sectors of the community is
actualised. Furthermore, given this diversity in the Muslim community, the paper
examined if Al-Ansaar, through its programmes, induces transcendence of or accentuates
differences through discourse of divergent ideologies, views and beliefs among Muslims.
In addition to the examination of the level of community participation in Radio Al-
Ansaar, the paper assesses the economic viability of the station. It highlights the
significance of advertising as an important revenue stream and assesses the prospects for
financial sustainability within the context of the hegemonic influence of vested
mercantile interests.
The evaluation of the Al-Ansaar project took place against the stipulations of the
Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) and against the
backdrop of key Islamic precepts. Furthermore, in the analysis of the various elements
mentioned, cognisance was taken of the perceptions of the varied individuals associated
with the station. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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