Putting Forward Sustainability as a Model for Journalism Education and Training
Booker, N., Mutsvairo, B., Baliah, D., Adjin-Tettey, T. D., Holt, K., Tallert, L., & Mujati, J.
ABSTRACT
African journalism practice presents unique opportunities and challenges that require journalists to be equipped with the necessary skills, knowledge, and values to engage in sustainable journalism. Training institutions play a critical role in ensuring that journalists are not only professionally-ready to execute their mandate but also that they can safeguard and promote ethical values in their everyday work. Some of these values include “truth telling, independence, objectivity, fairness, inclusivity and social justice” (Gade, Nduka, and Dastger 2017, 10). Africa, like other regions of the Global South, has several journalism training institutions that provide an opportunity to challenge “hegemonic epistemologies and ontologies of Western-centric journalism studies” (Mutsvairo et al. 2021, 993). In the context of this submission, the present study investigates the current state of sustainable journalism in Africa. We examined data based on a syllabi analysis of journalism programs in Kenya, South Africa and Ghana to appraise what role sustainable journalism education and training could play in Africa. Findings show that efforts are already in place across select learning and training institutions but also point to profound gaps in the curriculum, pedagogy and resources needed to prepare journalists for sustainable journalism.
Booker, N., Mutsvairo, B., Baliah, D., Adjin-Tettey, T. D., Holt, K., Tallert, L., & Mujati, J. (2024). Putting Forward Sustainability as a Model for Journalism Education and Training. Journalism Practice, 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2024.2344626