Communication, Media, and Development Policy

Analysis, Ideas and Debates on Development Policy Issues from Communication and Media Perspectives

Comments and Questions Related to Media and democracy in fragile states: the promises and problems of policy relevant research


I thought this page was very

I thought this page was very useful. I was particularly interested by the comment that 'many examples were provided of just how critical media was to any level of public discourse in countries like the DR Congo'. Does this mean that there isn't any real public discourse in the DR Congo other than in the media? One can think of reasons why this might be the case - such as that hardly anyone in that country represents a public interest, or collective interest, other than the interests of their kinship group. I'm not saying this makes media irrelevant - and I'm pretty sure that media like Radio Okapi have been effective in the DR Congo in countering false rumours and allaying tensions. But I wonder what examples people came up with, during the discussion, of media in the Congo improving governance by holding the powerful to account? Please send any answers to niclong65@hotmail.com
(I'm studying this for a dissertation). Thanks.


Media and democracy


James,

Thanks for presenting these challenging questions and still so pertinent to us practitioners. My name is Ronald Kayanja, I am Governance Advisor responsible for Media and Civil Society in the United Nations Mission for East Timor.

Increasingly, development agencies believe that building democratic governance in post-conflict and fragile situations requires building the capacity of the media as part of the entire package which ussually includes: conduct of elections; establishment of State Institutions--a working civil service, parliament, political parties, the justice system, security institutions etc. Indeed UNDP and the UN Department for Peacekeeping operations are now starting to focus on media capacity building. In the past such organizations saw media as avenues for their public information work.

In my view, media capacity building as part of re-establishment of democratic governance is fragile or post-conflict countries is still new, and studies will have to be done to enable us answer some of the questions you raise. For instance, in East Timor, UNDP, USAID and now the EU are investing millions of US dollars largely focussed on three areas: legislative framework; journalists training--including the plans to set up graduate courses at the University; and support for media sustainability as effective businesses. How will this impact on the fragile democracy that is East Timor? We are yet to establish this.

A recent study by Monica Nogara (Jan 2009) of UN DESA titled "Role of media in curbing corruption: the case of Uganda under President Yoweri K. Museveni during the “no-party” system" concludes that where media have been effective in promoting accountability it has been because they worked as part of broader civil society--including political parties, NGOs etc--and with support of donor actors. This is an important point, in my view. We should look at media as part of broader civil society. A strong media on its own may not achieve much if the broader civil society is not strong.

But thanks for raising these important questions which we should continue reflecting on.

Ronald Kayanja (rdkayanja@hotmail.com)






Be the first to comment!


Post Your Comment or Question:
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

The CI with

Comments on Blogs



Add our RSS feed

Recent Posts


Add our RSS feed

Social Climate Change 
Nobel Intentions 
Northern Lights 
Government Rules! 
Show me the Media Money - but what should we do with it? 
Little Green People 
Whose Policy is it Anyway? 
Can we put a value on the good that media do? A social cost approach to media development 
Percussive Effects 
A gutsy new DFID White Paper puts the politics back into development 
The commonalities lens sees AIDS better 
Battle Star Development: Prescriptions vs. Platforms 
Trading Rights 
Another Development 
Scaling Steep Slopes - The Public Policies Helping to Transform Medellin 
Accountability, media and the development system: a complicated romance 
People, Ideas and Things 
Donors, Governance and Media Aid: Some Thoughts from Sierra Leone  
ChangeNet: The Lessons from Obama's campaign for International Development Democracy and Governance Policy and Action 
Cable News 
Democratic Adjustment? 
Should international development NGOs play a major role in media for development? 
A Robust Research Agenda on Media and Democracy in Fragile States: Getting a More Serious Conversation Going 
Governance and the Media: the engagement gap 
A "democratic recession" presents challenges - and opportunities 
The TransAtlantic Taskforce on Development: great report, but where is the development and democracy debate headed? 
Development Street - no Wall? 
Media and democracy in fragile states: the promises and problems of policy relevant research  
Deportation of Rex Gardner is a Weak Attempt to Intimidate Fiji Media 
The media debate in the UK is unique - but the challenge of subsidising independent public interest media has urgent implications for democracy everywhere 
The Athenian Way!...or should that be "Why?" 
Winds of Change - Media Development Trends and Questions 
The Fairness Doctrine: is this the first big media debate under Obama and what does it mean for media development? 
Disaster-affected communities are and should be the architects of their own recovery, not merely passive recipients of international goodwill 
OBAMA, DEVELOPMENT, AID, and GRANDMOTHERS! 
Is a free and plural media more important than elections in securing democratic development? 
Media Development or Media for Development?: wrong question - but what’s the right one?  
A Rose by Any Other Name is Still a...the basis for one coherent Communication and Media Development field of work  
Accra: The big tent approach to development ends in agreement – and information is one of the big winners 
Where the European Union meets the African Union on media development 
Community Radio Initiators Ready to Run the Stations Soon in Bangladesh 
Re-vamping UNICEF’s Africa Communication for Development Strategy 
Accra Aid Effectiveness conference: can there be real “country ownership” without public debate? 
Big Investors - The Vacant Low Level Seat at the Accra High Level Development Effectiveness Summit 
Kenya Political Violence - Were Media Responsible? 
Tides of Hope? 
Miming Development: The Shortest Distance and International Development 
Over the Edge! 
Power of Movement 
Science Envy?: A Communication Perspective on the Core Principles that Guide International Development Interventions 
Talk with the People! 
AIDS Lines 
I Blame Smallpox 
I Had [I Think] A Dream 
Little Big Communication 

Your Recent Posts