381
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

What is News? A Young Peoples’ Perspective in Kenya

ORCID Icon

References

  • Antunovic, D., Parsons, P. and Cooke, T.R. 2018. “Checking’and googling: Stages of news consumption among young adults.” Journalism, 19(5): 632–648.
  • Carlson, M., and Lewis, S.C. 2019. “Temporal reflexivity in journalism studies: making sense of change in a more timely fashion.” Journalism, 20(5): 642–650.
  • Chari, T. 2014. ”Online news media consumption cultures among Zimbabwean citizens: ‘Home and away’.” Online Journalism in Africa, 199–216. Routledge.
  • Cheruiyot, D. 2019. Criticising Journalism: Popular Media Criticism in the Digital Age.
  • Cheruiyot, D., and Ferrer-Conill, R. 2018. ““Fact-Checking Africa” Epistemologies, data and the expansion of journalistic discourse.” Digital Journalism, 6: 964–975.
  • Clark, L. S., and Marchi, R. 2017. Young people and the future of news: Social media and the rise of connective journalism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Cloete, N., Bailey, T., and Pillay, P. 2011. Universities and economic development in Africa. South Africa. African Minds.
  • Comaroff, J., and Comaroff, J. L. 2015. Theory from the South: Or, how Euro-America is evolving toward Africa. London: Routledge.
  • Couldry, N., and Hepp, A. 2018. The mediated construction of reality. United Kingdom: John Wiley & Sons.
  • de Bruijn, M., and Both, J. 2017. “Youth between state and rebel (dis)orders: contesting legitimacy from below in Sub-Sahara Africa.” Small Wars & Insurgencies 28: 779–798.
  • Deuze, M. 2019. “What journalism is (not).” Social media+ society, 5(3): 2056305119857202.
  • Dugmore, H., and Ligaga, D. 2013. Citizen journalism in South Africa and Kenya: The quandary of quality and the prospects for growth. In The Future of Quality News Journalism, 260–276. Routledge.
  • Elvestad, E., and Phillips, A. 2018. Misunderstanding news audiences: Seven myths of the social media era. Routledge.
  • Elvestad, E., Phillips, A., and Feuerstein, M. 2017. “Can Trust in Traditional News Media Explain Cross-National Differences in News Exposure of Young People Online? A comparative study of Israel, Norway and the United Kingdom.” Digital Journalism, 1–20.
  • Fletcher, R., and Park, S. 2017. “The Impact of Trust in the News Media on Online News Consumption and Participation.” Digital Journalism, 1–19.
  • Gagliardone, I. 2019. Social Media and Elections in Africa: In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gagliardone, I. 2016. The politics of technology in Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Groot Kormelink, T., and Costera Meijer, I. 2014. “Tailor-Made News: Meeting the demands of news users on mobile and social media.” Journalism Studies, 15, 632–641.
  • Harcup, T., and O’Neill, D. 2017. “What is news? News values revisited (again)”. Journalism studies 18: 1470–1488.
  • Helle-Valle, J. 2016. Media culture in Africa? A practice-ethnographic approach. In Everyday Media Culture in Africa, 41–60. Routledge.
  • Kivikuru, U. 2017. “Ideals, buzzwords and true trying: ICT and communication policies in Kenya.” Journal of African Media Studies, 9(2): 307–321.
  • Ligaga, D. 2012. ““Virtual expressions”: Alternative online spaces and the staging of Kenyan popular cultures.” Research in African Literatures 43: 1–16.
  • Lindell, J., and Sartoretto, P. 2018. “Young people, class and the news: Distinction, socialization and moral sentiments.” Journalism Studies, 19(14): 2042–2061.
  • Ling, R. 2012. Taken for grantedness: The embedding of mobile communication into society. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Livingstone, S., and Sefton-Green, J. 2016. The class: Living and learning in the digital age (Vol. 1). NewYork: NYU Press.
  • Mabweazara, H. M. 2018. African Digital Media Review.
  • Mavhungu, J., and Mabweazara, H. M. 2014. The South African Mainstream Press in the Online Environment: Successes, Opportunities and Challenges. In Online Journalism in Africa. Routledge, 44–58.
  • Miller, D., Sinanan, J., Wang, X., McDonald, T., Haynes, N., Costa, E., … and Nicolescu, R. 2016. How the world changed social media, 286. London: UCL Press.
  • Mukhongo, L. L. 2015. Online Political Activism among Young People in Sub-Saharan Africa, in: Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Third Edition. IGI Global, 6419–6426.
  • Mukhongo, L. L. 2014. Negotiating the new media platforms: Youth and political images in Kenya. tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 12: 328–341.
  • Mulinge, M. M., and Arasa, J. N. 2017. The status of student involvement in university governance in Kenya: the case of public and private universities. Dakar: CODESRIA.
  • Ndemo, B. and Weiss, T. (eds.). 2017. Digital Kenya. Palgrave Macmillan UK, London. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-57878-5
  • Ndlela, M. N., and Mulwo, A. 2017. Social media, youth and everyday life in Kenya. Journal of African Media Studies 9: 277–290.
  • Newman, N. 2019. Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2019 156.
  • Newman, N. 2020. Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2020 112.
  • Newman, N., Fletcher, R., Kalogeropoulos, A., Levy, D. A., and Nielsen, R. K. 2017. Reuters Institute digital news report 2017.
  • Njogu, K. 2013. Youth and peaceful elections in Kenya. Nairobi: African Books Collective.
  • Nyamnjoh, F. B. 2005. Africa’s media: Democracy and the politics of belonging. Zed Books.
  • Obuya, J., and Ong’ondo, C. 2019. ““Caught between a Rock and a Hard Place”: How Kenyan Journalists are Coping with Pressure for Media Accountability.” African Journalism Studies, 40(2): 1–15.
  • Ogola, G. 2019. “# Whatwouldmagufulido? Kenya’s digital “practices” and “individuation” as a (non) political act.” Journal of Eastern African Studies 13: 124–139.
  • Ogola, G. 2015. “African journalism: A journey of failures and triumphs.” African Journalism Studies 36: 93–102. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/23743670.2015.1008175
  • Ogola, G. 2011. ”The political economy of the media in Kenya: from Kenyatta's nation-building press to Kibaki's local-language FM radio.” Africa Today, 57(3): 77–95.
  • Omanga, D. 2019. “WhatsApp as ‘digital publics’: the Nakuru Analysts and the evolution of participation in county governance in Kenya.” Journal of Eastern African Studies 13: 175–191.
  • Omanga, D., and Mainye, P. C. 2019. “North-South collaborations as a way of ‘not knowing Africa’: researching digital technologies in Kenya.” Journal of African Cultural Studies 31: 273–275.
  • Omanga, D., and Chepngetich-Omanga, P. 2013. Twitter and Africa’s ‘War on Terror’: News Framing and Convergence in. New Media Influence on Social and Political Change in Africa, 2.41
  • Park, R. E. 1940. “News as a Form of Knowledge: A Chapter in the Sociology of Knowledge.” American Journal of Sociology 45: 669–686.
  • Perry, S. D., and Lee, K. C. 2007. “Mobile phone text messaging overuse among developing world university students.” Communicatio 33: 63–79. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/02500160701685417
  • Picone, I. 2016. “Grasping the Digital News User: Conceptual and methodological advances in news use studies.” Digital Journalism 4(1): 125–141.
  • Picone, I., Courtois, C. and Paulussen, S. 2015. “When news is everywhere: Understanding participation, cross-mediality and mobility in journalism from a radical user perspective.” Journalism Practice 9: 35–49.
  • Schröder, C. 2014. A mobile app for citizen participation. Presented at the Proceedings of the 2014 Conference on Electronic Governance and Open Society: Challenges in Eurasia, ACM, 75–78.
  • Schudson, M. 1989. “The sociology of news production.” Media, Culture & Society 11: 263–282.
  • Tuchman, G. 1978. Making news: A study in the construction of reality. New York: Free Press.
  • Turkle, S. 2017. Alone together: Why we expect more from technology and less from each other. United Kingdom: Hachette UK.
  • Wahutu, J. S. 2019. Fake News and Journalistic “Rules of the Game.” African Journalism Studies, 40(4): 13–26.
  • Waisbord, S. 2013. Reinventing professionalism: Journalism and news in global perspective. John Wiley & Sons.
  • Wamunyu, W., and Siguru Wahutu, J. 2019. Old Habits, New Realities: Digital Newsrooms in Kenyan Commercial Media Houses. African Journalism Studies 1–17.
  • Wasserman, H. 2020. “Fake news from Africa: Panics, politics and paradigms.” Journalism 21: 3–16.
  • Wasserman, H. 2017. “African histories of the Internet.” Internet Histories 1: 129–137.
  • Wasserman, H. 2011. “Mobile phones, popular media, and everyday African democracy: Transmissions and transgressions.” Popular Communication, 9(2): 146–158.
  • Wasserman, H., and Madrid-Morales, D. 2019. “An exploratory study of “fake news” and media trust in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa.” African Journalism Studies 40: 107–123.
  • Wasserman, H., and Madrid-Morales, D. 2018. Fake news, disinformation and media trust in Africa: A comparative study of Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa. Presented at the ICAfrica Biennial Conference.
  • Weltevrede, E., Helmond, A., and Gerlitz, C. 2014. “The politics of real-time: A device perspective on social media platforms and search engines.” Theory, Culture & Society, 31(6): 125–150.
  • Westlund, O. 2015. “News consumption in an age of mobile media: Patterns, people, place, and participation.” Mobile Media & Communication, 3(2): 151–159.
  • Willems, W., and Mano, W. 2016. Decolonizing and provincializing audience and internet studies: Contextual approaches from African vantage points. In Everyday Media Culture in Africa, 15–40. Routledge.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.