All Stories

  1. An Exploratory Study of “Fake News” and Media Trust in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa
  2. Relevance, resistance, resilience: Journalism’s challenges in a global world
  3. China’s Media Go Global, edited by Daya Kishan Thussu, Hugo de Burgh, and Anbin Shi
  4. China-Africa media relations: What we know so far
  5. Journalism and Foreign Aid in Africa
  6. Fake news from Africa: Panics, politics and paradigms
  7. Open Ethics
  8. The meanings of citizenship: media use and democracy in South Africa
  9. Media Ethics Theories in Africa
  10. Media, citizenship and the politics of belonging in contemporary South Africa
  11. Making meaning of citizenship: How ‘born frees’ use media in South Africa's democratic evolution
  12. Journalism in a new democracy: The ethics of listening
  13. Tabloid TV in Zambia: A reception study of Lusaka viewers of Muvi TV news
  14. China in South Africa: media responses to a developing relationship
  15. THE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AND MEDIA STUDIES, RHODES UNIVERSITY, SOUTH AFRICA
  16. What's New? Insight intoEcquid Novi: African Journalism Studies
  17. TOWARDS A GLOBAL JOURNALISM ETHICS VIA LOCAL NARRATIVES
  18. THE PRESENCE OF THE PAST
  19. Is our media (still) racist?
  20. Mobile Phones, Popular Media, and Everyday African Democracy: Transmissions and Transgressions
  21. Global journalism studies: Beyond panoramas
  22. Towards an Open Ethics: Implications of New Media Platforms for Global Ethics Discourse
  23. Special issue: Journalism in the global South: South Africa and Brazil
  24. Political journalism in South Africa as a developing democracy – understanding media freedom and responsibility
  25. ‘We're not like that’: Denial of racism in the Afrikaans press in South Africa
  26. The Search for Global Media Ethics
  27. Afro-optimism/Afro-pessimism and the South African media
  28. EXTENDING THE THEORETICAL CLOTH TO MAKE ROOM FOR AFRICAN EXPERIENCE
  29. ATTACK OF THE KILLER NEWSPAPERS!
  30. Having it both ways: balancing market and political interests at a South African daily newspaper
  31. Is a New Worldwide Web Possible? An Explorative Comparison of the Use of ICTs by Two South African Social Movements
  32. Renaissance and resistance: Using ICTs for social change in Africa1
  33. Connecting African Activism with Global Networks: ICTs and South African Social Movements
  34. A Fragile Affair: The Relationship Between the Mainstream Media and Government in Post-Apartheid South Africa
  35. A Fragile Affair: The Relationship Between the Mainstream Media and Government in Post-Apartheid South Africa
  36. Debating the media, shaping identity: Postcolonial discourse and public criticism
  37. Talking of Change: Constructing Social Identities in South African Media Debates
  38. Which public? Whose interest? The South African Media and its role during the first ten years of democracy
  39. Covering HIV/AIDS: Towards a heuristic comparison between communitarian and utilitarian ethics
  40. E–governance and e-publicanism: preliminary perspectives on the role of the Internet in South African democratic processes
  41. A Review ofIt's My Life
  42. Between the Local and the Global: South African Languages and the Internet
  43. Intercultural Dialogue in Recent Afrikaans Literary Texts: A Discourse of Identity
  44. Intercultural Dialogue in Recent Afrikaans Literary Texts: A Discourse of Identity
  45. Intercultural Dialogue in Recent Afrikaans Literary Texts: A Discourse of Identity
  46. Postcolonial cultural identity in recent Afrikaans literary texts
  47. Re‐imagining identity essentialism and hybridity in post‐apartheid Afrikaans short fiction
  48. Conflicts of interest?