The Kenyan 2007 Elections and Their Aftermath: The Role of Media and Communication

Posted by LeighJaschke on Jul 13, 2009
Author: 
Abdi, Jamal; Deane, James
Publication Type: 
Other
Publication Date: 
Apr 2008
Publisher/Journal: 
The BBC World Service Trust
Abstract: 

This 16-page policy briefing from the BBC World Trust Service analyses the role of the media in the Kenyan [January 2008] post-election violence. It is designed to enable an understanding of what has happened in Kenya in the belief that these issues have important policy implications and consequences in many countries. It situates its analysis within debates on democratic governance and poverty in order to contribute to a process of extracting lessons from the crisis. The briefing examines political polarity in the media and its function as a political tool. It discusses the inciting of violence and the role of the local language or vernacular media, as well as the media's role in calming the violence. "The role of the media in Kenya's violence has ...raised questions of whether media can be too free in fragile states such as Kenya....[The] briefing argues that the role of the local language media during the crisis was the product of a chaotic regulatory policy and the lack of training - especially of talk show hosts, whose programmes provided the platform for most of the hate speech....It argues that many local language radio [stations] played a role in calming tensions as well as inflaming them, and could be a powerful mechanism for reconciliation."

Countries: 
Global Regions: 
Citation: 
Abdi, Jamal; Deane, James (2008). The Kenyan 2007 elections and their aftermath: the role of media and communication . Policy Briefing #1. BBC World Service Trust. London, UK.
The Kenyan 2007 Elections and Their Aftermath: The Role of Media and Communication data sheet 3631 Views
Author: 
Abdi, Jamal; Deane, James
Publication Type: 
Other
Publication Date: 
Apr 2008
Publisher/Journal: 
The BBC World Service Trust
Abstract: 

This 16-page policy briefing from the BBC World Trust Service analyses the role of the media in the Kenyan [January 2008] post-election violence. It is designed to enable an understanding of what has happened in Kenya in the belief that these issues have important policy implications and consequences in many countries. It situates its analysis within debates on democratic governance and poverty in order to contribute to a process of extracting lessons from the crisis. The briefing examines political polarity in the media and its function as a political tool. It discusses the inciting of violence and the role of the local language or vernacular media, as well as the media's role in calming the violence. "The role of the media in Kenya's violence has ...raised questions of whether media can be too free in fragile states such as Kenya....[The] briefing argues that the role of the local language media during the crisis was the product of a chaotic regulatory policy and the lack of training - especially of talk show hosts, whose programmes provided the platform for most of the hate speech....It argues that many local language radio [stations] played a role in calming tensions as well as inflaming them, and could be a powerful mechanism for reconciliation."

Countries: 
Global Regions: 
Citation: 
Abdi, Jamal; Deane, James (2008). The Kenyan 2007 elections and their aftermath: the role of media and communication . Policy Briefing #1. BBC World Service Trust. London, UK.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br> <b><i><blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options