The BBC's Legacy in Africa
Continuities and Change
Herausgeber: Sharra, Albert; Gunde, Anthony Mavuto; Kainja, Jimmy
	The BBC's Legacy in Africa
Continuities and Change
Herausgeber: Sharra, Albert; Gunde, Anthony Mavuto; Kainja, Jimmy
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This book critically examines the historical and ongoing influence of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on African broadcasting, tracing its colonial roots through to its post-colonial legacy. This book is an essential resource for scholars and researchers in media and communication studies, African studies, and decolonial studies.
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					This book critically examines the historical and ongoing influence of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on African broadcasting, tracing its colonial roots through to its post-colonial legacy. This book is an essential resource for scholars and researchers in media and communication studies, African studies, and decolonial studies.				
				Produktdetails
					- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 210
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. August 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 485g
- ISBN-13: 9781041017394
- ISBN-10: 1041017391
- Artikelnr.: 73778028
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 210
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. August 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 485g
- ISBN-13: 9781041017394
- ISBN-10: 1041017391
- Artikelnr.: 73778028
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Albert Sharra is a joint postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Witwatersrand and the University of Edinburgh, an honorary fellow in the Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh and a visiting research fellow in the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI) at the University of Westminster. He is a multi-award-winning journalist with a decade of experience in the newsroom. He conducts research on digital media, digital politics, artificial intelligence and digital culture and society. He is a Digital Media Mentor at the International Press Institute (IPI) and has raised over EUR60 000 in grants and trained more than 500 African journalists through international workshops. Jimmy Kainja is a senior lecturer at the University of Malawi and a PhD candidate in Journalism and Media Studies at the University of Witwatersrand. He has over ten years of experience teaching Media, Communication, and Cultural Studies. He holds a BSc in Media Studies and an MRes in Media and Communication. His research focuses on media and communications policy, journalism, digital rights, freedom of expression, access to information and the intersection of media, democracy and development. Anthony Mavuto Gunde is an associate professor of Media, Communication, and Cultural Studies at the University of Malawi. He is also a research fellow of the Journalism Department at Stellenbosch University. Gunde holds a PhD in Journalism Studies from Stellenbosch University and a Master of Arts degree in Communications from Missouri State University. He has published an edited volume, multiple chapters and journal articles in international peer-reviewed journals and books.
	1. Introduction: The BBC's Legacy in Africa: Continuities and Change 2.
Decolonising the African Radio: Changes and Continuities in Malawi 3. BBC's
Mixed Legacy in Uganda: Ownership, Programming, Training, and a Fightback
4. Torn between multiple interests: Correspondents and the BBC legacy in
Africa 5. BBC Focus on Africa and the African story 6. Influence of BBC's
HARDtalk on Zimbabwe's Political Interviews: A Culture of "Agonistic"
Deliberations 7. "Voice of Record": The Enduring Legacy of BBC Radio in
Shaping African Languages, Culture, and Politics. 8. Sports Reporting and
Audience Engagement: Examining BBC Yoruba Service Sports Colloquial
Headlines 9. "The Continuity of the Propinquity Effect": The BBC and
broadcasting in Mozambique 10. Glimpses of BCC Broadcasting in Anglophone
and Francophone Africa: The Case of Nigeria and Benin Republic 11. BBC's
public media legacy and the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation 12. ZBC's BBC
Model: A Failed Public Service Vision? 13. Conclusion: Decolonising the
African Radio, Prospects, and Challenges
	Decolonising the African Radio: Changes and Continuities in Malawi 3. BBC's
Mixed Legacy in Uganda: Ownership, Programming, Training, and a Fightback
4. Torn between multiple interests: Correspondents and the BBC legacy in
Africa 5. BBC Focus on Africa and the African story 6. Influence of BBC's
HARDtalk on Zimbabwe's Political Interviews: A Culture of "Agonistic"
Deliberations 7. "Voice of Record": The Enduring Legacy of BBC Radio in
Shaping African Languages, Culture, and Politics. 8. Sports Reporting and
Audience Engagement: Examining BBC Yoruba Service Sports Colloquial
Headlines 9. "The Continuity of the Propinquity Effect": The BBC and
broadcasting in Mozambique 10. Glimpses of BCC Broadcasting in Anglophone
and Francophone Africa: The Case of Nigeria and Benin Republic 11. BBC's
public media legacy and the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation 12. ZBC's BBC
Model: A Failed Public Service Vision? 13. Conclusion: Decolonising the
African Radio, Prospects, and Challenges
1. Introduction: The BBC's Legacy in Africa: Continuities and Change 2.
Decolonising the African Radio: Changes and Continuities in Malawi 3. BBC's
Mixed Legacy in Uganda: Ownership, Programming, Training, and a Fightback
4. Torn between multiple interests: Correspondents and the BBC legacy in
Africa 5. BBC Focus on Africa and the African story 6. Influence of BBC's
HARDtalk on Zimbabwe's Political Interviews: A Culture of "Agonistic"
Deliberations 7. "Voice of Record": The Enduring Legacy of BBC Radio in
Shaping African Languages, Culture, and Politics. 8. Sports Reporting and
Audience Engagement: Examining BBC Yoruba Service Sports Colloquial
Headlines 9. "The Continuity of the Propinquity Effect": The BBC and
broadcasting in Mozambique 10. Glimpses of BCC Broadcasting in Anglophone
and Francophone Africa: The Case of Nigeria and Benin Republic 11. BBC's
public media legacy and the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation 12. ZBC's BBC
Model: A Failed Public Service Vision? 13. Conclusion: Decolonising the
African Radio, Prospects, and Challenges
				Decolonising the African Radio: Changes and Continuities in Malawi 3. BBC's
Mixed Legacy in Uganda: Ownership, Programming, Training, and a Fightback
4. Torn between multiple interests: Correspondents and the BBC legacy in
Africa 5. BBC Focus on Africa and the African story 6. Influence of BBC's
HARDtalk on Zimbabwe's Political Interviews: A Culture of "Agonistic"
Deliberations 7. "Voice of Record": The Enduring Legacy of BBC Radio in
Shaping African Languages, Culture, and Politics. 8. Sports Reporting and
Audience Engagement: Examining BBC Yoruba Service Sports Colloquial
Headlines 9. "The Continuity of the Propinquity Effect": The BBC and
broadcasting in Mozambique 10. Glimpses of BCC Broadcasting in Anglophone
and Francophone Africa: The Case of Nigeria and Benin Republic 11. BBC's
public media legacy and the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation 12. ZBC's BBC
Model: A Failed Public Service Vision? 13. Conclusion: Decolonising the
African Radio, Prospects, and Challenges







