Vacancy :BBC Swahili seeks journalists [Africa]

Experienced journalists can apply for several positions.

The BBC Swahili Service is hiring journalists in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya.

Positions include senior journalist, digital journalist, multimedia journalist in Tanzania, and digital journalist, multimedia journalist and senior journalist in Kenya.

For most positions, candidates must be fluent in English and Kiswahili.

The deadline is Sept. 8.

For more information, click Stellanwofia.blogspot.com  

Deadline approaching for registration for Webinar on elections reporting [US]

Journalists covering the U.S. elections are invited to attend this free webinar.

The National Press Club's Journalism Institute is organizing the "Election 2020: 'What if?' workshop" at 11:30 a.m. EDT on Sept. 3.

Participants will join breakout groups on one of four topics: voter suppression, polling access and Election Day pandemonium; mail-in ballots and US Postal Service; foreign interference; and contested election results.

After the breakout discussions, they will reconvene to learn about story ideas and reporting tips generated by each group.

Registration is ongoing, but spots are limited.

For more information, click Stellanwofia.blogspot.com  

“Fake News”: Understanding the Scourge in Nigeria

By Raji Rasaki

There have been studies conducted on what exactly constitutes “fake news” and its variants. Researchers have looked into the Nigerian examples of ‘fake news’, its mode of transmission, the reasons it spreads in Nigeria, its impact on our democracy as well as possible structural solutions to the menace. 

Yet, there is a need for a holistic view of the issues around the scourge within the Nigerian context. This article adopts the method of contextual analysis of a selected studies, situating the studies within the Nigerian milieu, assessing the positions of the authors, experts, readers (including offline and online audience) and other texts to understand the scourge. 

The study finds out that ‘fake news’ thrives in Nigeria in its different variants. These variants include misinformation, disinformation and mal-information. It finds out that the nation’s culture of ‘closed’ (as opposed to open) governance, which thrives on official secrecy and dearth of timely official information is a recipe for the scourge to spread. It also finds out that increased Nigeria’s population on social media and other digital space is an escape route from muffled voices in the mainstream; an avenue to create, share and distribute contents of all sorts, many of which populate the misinformation ecosystem in Nigeria.  

This study’s contribution to knowledge is underscored in how it justaposes selected past research on ‘fake news’ in Nigeria and analyses contextual factors and  impacts of fake news proliferation. The study therefore recommends among other deliverables, aggressive engagements with online and social media users whose increased media literacy will help reduce the spread of ‘fake news’ in Nigeria.    

To read more, click Stellanwofia.blogspot.com