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Research Article

What Motivates Some Ghanaian Private Media To Expose Political Corruption?

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Pages 433-450 | Received 11 Jun 2020, Accepted 24 Jan 2021, Published online: 03 Feb 2021
 

Abstract

The private media are often seen as a part of the corrupt network, particularly in developing countries considered corrupt. Using Giddens’s theory of structuration and data from in-depth semi-structured interviews, this article addresses a key question: What motivates some Ghanaian private media to expose political corruption? I argue that human agency and structural conditions are important in understanding whether the private media tackle political corruption. Whether the private media choose to expose political corruption depends on democratic freedoms, journalistic professionalism, financial considerations, personal experience, and political interests among different agents, including media owners, journalists, politicians, and business owners. The findings indicate that unless media owners and journalists are determined to address political corruption, the enabling structural conditions for the performance of media watchdog functions are meaningless. This study suggests that agents and, for that matter, human beings are not machines programmed to act only in certain ways based on structural conditions in which they are embedded. This article makes significant contributions to the literature in the fields of media, corruption, political science, and sociology.

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Notes on contributors

Joseph Yaw Asomah

Joseph Yaw Asomah holds a PhD in sociology from the University of Saskatchewan. His research interests generally focus on political sociology, international development, human rights, policing, and white-collar crime. Dr. Asomah has published in reputable Journals, including Third World Quarterly, African Human Rights Law Journal, and Critical Media Studies in Communication. He can be contacted at [email protected].

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