Digital Technologies and the Evolving African Newsroom

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African Journalism
African journalism studies
African Journalists
African Newsrooms
Al Ahram
Al Dostor
Al Masry Al Youm
Alternative Journalism
Alternative Media Sites
BBC Arabic Service
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Civic Journalism
Comment Forums
Communal Social Relations
Community Radio Stations
Digital Journalism
digital newsroom adaptation Africa
Digitization
Enrich User Experience
Epistemology
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Free Online News
Hayes Mabweazara
Independent National Electoral Commission
information and communication technologies
Interactive Digital Technologies
Internet
Mainstream Journalists
media convergence
New Media Technologies
News Hound
newsroom innovation
Nigerian Journalists
Occupy Nigeria
Online User Comments
Ordinary Mozambicans
qualitative media research
Rest Lag
Social Media
social media reporting
Twitter Network

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138823839
  • Weight: 385g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Nov 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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African newsrooms are experiencing the disruptive impact of new digital technologies on the way they generate and disseminate news. Indeed, newsrooms are being forced to adapt in various ways and there are clear dimensions of localized creativity and adaptations by journalists to the digital revolution. In the same way, the influences of digitization, internet, and social media are changing the informational needs of readers, including how they engage with news. These developments nonetheless remain on the margins of ‘mainstream’ journalism research – very few researchers have sought to qualitatively capture the implications of developments in digital technologies on the routine practices of African journalists, especially in their ‘natural habitat’, the newsroom.

In this light, this edited volume interrogates the changing ecology of news-making in Africa in the context of rapid technological changes in newsrooms as well as in the wider social context of news production. It brings together six contributions drawn from five countries: Egypt, Mozambique, South Africa, Nigeria and Zimbabwe, to explore practices, challenges and professional normative dilemmas emerging with the adoption and appropriation of new technologies. While the studies point to dimensions of localised new technology appropriations as defined by the complex socio-political structures in which African journalists operate, they are not rigidly confined to Africa. They are expressly in dialogue with theoretical observations largely emerging from Western scholarship. In this sense, the book goes beyond simply mainstreaming African perspectives, it engages directly with dominant theoretical observations and offers a point of departure for developing what could loosely be branded as an African digital journalism epistemology.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Digital Journalism.

Hayes Mawindi Mabweazara, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in Journalism at Falmouth University, UK. He serves on the editorial board of Digital Journalism and is the Book Reviews Editor for Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies. As well as guest-editing a special issue of Digital Journalism 2(1) (2014), on which this book is based, Mabweazara has co-edited a special issue of Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism 12(6) (2011), themed: ‘New Media and Journalism Practice in Africa: An Agenda for Research’. Mabweazara also co-edited: Online Journalism in Africa (2014) and is currently working on a monograph, titled: Africa’s Mainstream Press in the Digital Era (2015).