Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria

The Nigerian journalist has lost his monopoly of information gathering, dissemination and control with the involvement of citizens in ‘journalism’ through social media especially Whatsapp. The objective of this paper is to show how through social media, with emphasis on Whatsapp, Nigerian citizens h...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chukwuma Anyanwu &, Elo Ibagere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athens Institute for Education and Research 2021-04-01
Series:Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2021-7-2-3-Anyanwu.pdf
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spelling doaj-da3325b54273472984c13c58fce9daed2021-02-25T15:00:39ZengAthens Institute for Education and ResearchAthens Journal of Mass Media and Communications2407-94992021-04-017212113610.30958/ajmmc.7-2-3Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria Chukwuma Anyanwu &0 Elo Ibagere1Senior Lecturer, Department of Theatre Arts Faculty of Arts, Delta State University, NigeriaSenior Lecturer, Department of Theatre Arts Faculty of Arts, Delta State University, NigeriaThe Nigerian journalist has lost his monopoly of information gathering, dissemination and control with the involvement of citizens in ‘journalism’ through social media especially Whatsapp. The objective of this paper is to show how through social media, with emphasis on Whatsapp, Nigerian citizens have been able to find their voices and can now contribute to societal well-being and development by embarking on information gathering and reporting. It uses participant-observation method to interrogate how citizen journalism has engendered development via negative journalism practice. The findings indicate that the government and other relevant stakeholders in the society respond to the voices of the people on issues which ordinarily would have been muted by conventional journalism practice or ignored by government. It concludes that citizen journalism through unconscious and unprofessional practice engenders development by somehow making government accountable through its response to issues of concern in areas that would otherwise, have been muted. https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2021-7-2-3-Anyanwu.pdfsocial mediacitizen journalismdevelopmentcommunication viceswhatsppnigeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chukwuma Anyanwu &
Elo Ibagere
spellingShingle Chukwuma Anyanwu &
Elo Ibagere
Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
social media
citizen journalism
development
communication vices
whatspp
nigeria
author_facet Chukwuma Anyanwu &
Elo Ibagere
author_sort Chukwuma Anyanwu &
title Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
title_short Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
title_full Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
title_fullStr Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Communication Vices that Engender Development: Oxymoronic Relevance of Social Media Use in Nigeria
title_sort communication vices that engender development: oxymoronic relevance of social media use in nigeria
publisher Athens Institute for Education and Research
series Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
issn 2407-9499
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The Nigerian journalist has lost his monopoly of information gathering, dissemination and control with the involvement of citizens in ‘journalism’ through social media especially Whatsapp. The objective of this paper is to show how through social media, with emphasis on Whatsapp, Nigerian citizens have been able to find their voices and can now contribute to societal well-being and development by embarking on information gathering and reporting. It uses participant-observation method to interrogate how citizen journalism has engendered development via negative journalism practice. The findings indicate that the government and other relevant stakeholders in the society respond to the voices of the people on issues which ordinarily would have been muted by conventional journalism practice or ignored by government. It concludes that citizen journalism through unconscious and unprofessional practice engenders development by somehow making government accountable through its response to issues of concern in areas that would otherwise, have been muted.
topic social media
citizen journalism
development
communication vices
whatspp
nigeria
url https://www.athensjournals.gr/media/2021-7-2-3-Anyanwu.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT chukwumaanyanwu communicationvicesthatengenderdevelopmentoxymoronicrelevanceofsocialmediauseinnigeria
AT eloibagere communicationvicesthatengenderdevelopmentoxymoronicrelevanceofsocialmediauseinnigeria
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