The impact of democratisation on state media system in Zambia : the case of The Times newspapers

This thesis explores the manner in which political-economic forces born of democratisation have shaped media developments in Zambia, affected the welfare of journalists and the viability of the state owned press epitomised by the Times Newspapers. The aim is to inform the privatisation policy dis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chirambo, Kondwani
Other Authors: Fourie, P.J. (Prof.)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:Chirambo, Kondwani (2011) The impact of democratisation on state media system in Zambia : the case of times newspapers, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4706>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4706
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Summary:This thesis explores the manner in which political-economic forces born of democratisation have shaped media developments in Zambia, affected the welfare of journalists and the viability of the state owned press epitomised by the Times Newspapers. The aim is to inform the privatisation policy discourse. Using a political economy analysis, the thesis unveils the historical intimacy between nationalist administrations and multinational business elites and how these forces - often working in collusion - influenced patterns of media ownership, inhibited labour rights and controlled communicative activity – indicative of how the state and markets can constrain freedom of expression and association, despite democratisation. The thesis contends that the uncertainty of neo-patrimonial conditions that characterised the post colonial era has not dissipated to a great extent and continues to undermine media and institutional reform in today’s liberally inclined Zambia. Pervasive clientelism has also compromised popular perceptions of state media systems, subverting competitiveness and the propagandist function of the Times Newspapers in the liberalised market, a point empirically illustrated through the analysis of market and public opinion data. === Communication Science === D. Litt. et Phil. (Communication)