Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2746-1 • Paperback • December 2003 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Charles C. Okigbo is associate professor of communication at North Dakota State University. Festus Eribo is professor of communication and broadcasting at East Carolina University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: Foundation
Chapter 3 1 Afrocentricity and Communication in Africa
Chapter 4 2 The Triple Heritage: The Split Sould of a Continent
Chapter 5 3 The African World: The Publics of African Communication
Part 6 Part II: Theory
Chapter 7 4 Communication and Political Development
Chapter 8 5 Multiple Perspectives on Development Communication
Chapter 9 6 Participatory Communication for Development and African Philosophy Debate
Part 10 Part III: Media Practice
Chapter 11 7 Reporting Africa's Problems
Chapter 12 8 Press Freedom and National Development in Africa after the Cold War
Chapter 13 9 Broadcasting and National Development in Africa
Part 14 Part IV: African Culture
Chapter 15 10 Communication, Development, and Meta-ethnic Empathy
Chapter 16 11 Adult Education and the Media
Chapter 17 12 The Entertainment-Education Strategy in Development Communication
Part 18 Part V: Communication Technology
Chapter 19 13 The Internet in Africa: Leapfrogging to a Global Furture
Chapter 20 14 Information and Communication Technologies for Rural Development
Chapter 21 15 African Development and Innovation of Communication Technologies
Part 22 Part VI: Unity, Debt, and Communication
Chapter 23 16 The New African Union and the Integration of Africa
Chapter 24 17 Sustainable Development of Africa: The Debt Crisis
Chapter 25 18 Cultural Warrants in Development Communication Contexts in Africa
Chapter 26 Bibliography
This is a book that very nicely bridges the worlds of the academe, policy, and practice, in a way that allows readers to understand and reflect on how far Africa has come on the development continuum, how much more needs to be accomplished, and how elusive it is to find the right formula for attaining and sustaining development objectives—despite four-plus decades of studying and writing about these issues.
— Folu F. Ogundimu, Michigan State University
This volume offers an important contribution to the development of communication literature, building from historical and cultural perspectives particular to this regional context.
— Karin Wilkins, University of Texas at Austin