Title: STREAM
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2STREAM
- Strengthening Africas Media
- STREAM 1 African Framework for the Development
of a Sustainable and Pluralistic Media -
- STREAM 2 Report of the Findings of the
Strengthening African Media Consultative Process
3Context Changes in the media and communications
landscape
- Globalisation of democratisation in 3rd world
- Liberalisation
- Privatisation and commercialisation of state
media - Communitarian agenda
- Re-regulation of media
4Contemporary efforts at Media Development in
Africa
- Windhoek Declaration May 3rd, 1991
- CfA Commission for Africa (media as an avenue
for potential growth and development of Africa) - GFMD Global Forum for Media Development (donor
structures) - AMDI African Media Development Initiative
(Research 2000 2005)
5STREAM 1
- African Framework for the Development of a
Sustainable and Pluralistic Media - Document formed by media lecturers, students,
international foundations, World Bank, UN
agencies, African Development Bank and even the
Peace and Security Department of the AU. - 40 African countries represented
- Online dialogue and consultations
6Main aims of the STREAM process
- Agree on a shared understanding of state of media
in Africa - Agree on concrete recommendations that will see
more coherent and inclusive set of media
development interventions in Africa
7Major challenges facing African media
- Media freedom
- Constitutions include freedom of expression
- But media regulation policies from colonial times
still exist - Governments have attacked media property
Zimbabwe - North African countries continue stiff control
over information and media distribution (e.g. web
content control) - In repressive regimes media is compromised. Bad
relationship with government. - Policy
- Issues surrounding defamation and legal
protection of investigative journalists - No laws covering new technological environment
8Major challenges facing African media...
- Capacity and standards
- Cant promote good governance if media
practitioners do not adhere to professional codes
of conduct - Low ethical standards
- Lack of computers and internet to access
information and deliver high-quality stories at
low cost - Sustainability
- Small media in many regions are dependent on
donor support unsustainable - Lack of access to capital, poor financial
practice - Lack of quality and diversity of content
- No high quality local content
- Advertisers pressure content choices
- Imbalance of programming (entertainment,
religious, civic education, public issues) East
Africa
9Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Freedom of expression and information
- Promote adoption of
- Declaration of Principles on Freedom of
Expression in Africa - International freedom of information principles
and standards - National laws related to access to information,
whistle blowing, protection of sources etc. - Support efforts to repeal criminal defamation and
insult laws - Ensure protection of journalists
- Educate lawyers and judiciary on international
standards related to freedom of expression and
information
10Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Policy and regulation
- Identify poor national laws and promote laws that
enable rather than stifle the growth of strong,
pluralistic and sustainable media. - Promote laws that diminish negative impacts of
media concentration and promote fair competition
and ensure diversity - Promote good corporate governance among African
media enterprises - Advocate licensing of community broadcasters in
Africa - Promote transforming state broadcasters into
public-service media operating independently from
state influence
11Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Capacity-building
- Audit existing media training institutions in
Africa identify problems, develop proposals - Develop minimum standards for media training
continent wide competency tests to increase
academic recognition - Promote in house training policies continuous
skills development - Strengthen links between media and media training
industry - Promote media exchange programmes and media
networks - Establish regional centres of excellence to
overcome national media capacity-building
shortfalls - Pool training expertise, resources and mentoring
widen media access to cutting-edge training
12Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Sustainability
- Audit all funds available to African media,
ensure that proposals for funding will ensure
sustainable media - Advocate for public funding to create community,
local and small media - Research community media sector (help with
strategy to ensure effective and sustainable
sector) - Study the economic conditions (taxes on imports)
and then advocate for lowering/ waivering taxes - Advocate removal of unfair competition from state
media - Advocate for recognition of media as a
development sector in its own right and attract
investor funds
13Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Professionalism and Ethics
- Develop way to monitor adherence to professional
media ethics - Publicise norms and standards widely help
ensure they are respected - Encourage professional networks, forums to
strengthen media practices in Africa - African Media Award to reward outstanding media
practice, entrepreneurship, innovation and
public-interest journalism - Promote fair and equitable working conditions for
women in African media
14Proposed actions to help develop a sustainable
and pluralistic media
- Content
- Ensure respect of cultural and linguistic
diversity and promote this - Facilitate with audience surveys for relevant
content - Increase awareness of media responsibility to
address development challenges (health,
governance, conflict resolution, peace building
and globalisation) - Ensure production and dissemination of content
reflects diversity of interests, opinions and
voices of all social actors (incl. marginalised) - Promote use of ICTs to digitize and share content
across continent
15STREAM 2 (very similar to STREAM 1)
- Meeting of African Journalists in regions to
ascertain the priorities for strengthening media
institutions in Africa. - African consensus
- Local understanding of context
- Evolving agenda of media development
- http//www.uneca.org/africanmedia
- (UNECA and CfA)
16Regions
- Southern Africa
- Francophone West and Central Africa
- Anglophone West Africa
- Eastern Africa
- Northern Africa
17Synthesis of findings
- Each region submitted
- analysis of media practice, ownership, training
and support - proposals coverings policy and legislation,
infrastructure, content production,
sustainability, plurality and diversity.
18Key issue Media Development
- Not clear what development entails
- Q Development of ..?
- A 1) Independent media
- 2) State, public and private media
- 3) Communications
19Media Development according to the Windhoek
Declaration
- Identify economic barriers to establishment of
news media (in order to remove these things) - Train journalists and managers
- Remove legal barriers to formation of
journalists trade unions associations - Develop a register of available funds for media
and how to access it
20Another issue Regulation
- Some countries media freedom has increased (SA,
Namibia, Zambia Malawi) - Other countries are concerned about media
regulations (especially in North Africa
Tunisia, Egypt, Uganda)
21Enhance media regulation
- Supportive political environment (tolerance
media policy reform) - Supportive legal environment (freedom of
information) - Enabling economic environment (media fund and
supportive economic policies) - Enhanced associational infrastructure (unions and
support for media professionals)
22Media Production - Education is the key
- Increase skills base of journalists and encourage
critical thinking - Advocacy at higher educational institutions for a
basic level of assessment for journalism
qualification - Strengthen existing networks to support and
increase exchange among media students and
educators
23Education
- Lobby African governments to increase budget for
education (particularly media education) - Use databank of journalism educational
institutions to research journalism education in
Africa
24Fund?
- Through the discussions it was realised there was
a need for a continent-wide media and
communication support fund (African-led
initiative) - While Southern Africa is ahead in terms of
support mechanisms the rest of the continent is
still lacking
25Priority Areas for Intervention
- Financing research into setting up a media and
communication fund for Africa which will - Provide financial support to media
- Help with international lobbying and advocacy to
support media in Africa - Mobilise resources for training and education
26Priority Areas for Intervention
- Supporting media training and education
- Strengthening media support institutions
- Instrumental in advocacy for policy regulation
- Watchdog over the media to ensure media serve
public interest - Supporting journalists unions and associations
- Develop professional identity
27Final word to ECA and donors
- Africans know their problems. They know what is
possible. This is shared across all the
sub-regions, from north Africa right through to
southern Africa. They are aware that most of
their problems are structural. They are also
aware that they can be agents of change. With a
little push of assistance, the possibilities for
change are numerous, and the findings testify to
that. F. Banda
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