2014
DOI: 10.5789/7-2-133
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Good Governance and Media Ownership in Nigeria: Dilemmatic Practices, Stoic Challenges

Abstract: Discourses on democracy in Africa often revolve around the relevance of Western democracy to African nations given the region's peculiar socioeconomic and cultural conditions (Ezeani, 2013). In many African countries, evidence abounds of the absence of democratic dividends, an indicator of the apparent failure of liberal democracy in the region. The media as the fourth estate of the realm is often seen, albeit idealistically, as being positioned to rise above democratic failures and, in its watchdog roles, to … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
(5 reference statements)
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“…These findings correspond to earlier studies on conflict reporting in African news media, which relate gaps in in-depth reporting of causes and attention to different sides in the conflict, to structural weaknesses in the media field rather than to a ‘Rwandan model’ of deliberately enflaming tensions (e.g. Hackett, 2003: 61–63; Khan, 1998; Omenugha et al, 2013; Rodny-Gumede, 2015). This is important from a policy perspective as it supports the view that more (donor) investments in news media in divided contexts can enable them to play a more supportive role in peacebuilding.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…These findings correspond to earlier studies on conflict reporting in African news media, which relate gaps in in-depth reporting of causes and attention to different sides in the conflict, to structural weaknesses in the media field rather than to a ‘Rwandan model’ of deliberately enflaming tensions (e.g. Hackett, 2003: 61–63; Khan, 1998; Omenugha et al, 2013; Rodny-Gumede, 2015). This is important from a policy perspective as it supports the view that more (donor) investments in news media in divided contexts can enable them to play a more supportive role in peacebuilding.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In this section, we describe the quantitative research strategy. While previous analyses on divisive reporting in Nigeria have relied on qualitative approaches, focusing on language use, the identity of actors cited in reports and specific cases (Musa and Ferguson, 2013; Omenugha et al, 2013; Yusha’u, 2015), this quantitative research approach allows for higher generalizability of findings, but focuses on a more narrow topic, that is, the reporting of conflict causes.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ownership describes the proprietorship rights that an individual, a group, or an institution, exercise over a media house (Omenugha et al, 2013). These rights confer on such proprietors, the power to determine editorial viewpoint and content of media organisations.…”
Section: Newspaper Ownership and Editorial Freedommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This makes media owners, and not the editors, the 'ultimate gatekeepers.' That is the reason some media owners can hire and fire reporters and editors at the slightest whim (Omenugha et al, 2013). But editors who are not comfortable working under such restraining conditions are at liberty to leave.…”
Section: Newspaper Ownership and Editorial Freedommentioning
confidence: 99%