Document detail

Elections and the media in postconflict Africa: votes and voices for peace?

London; New York: Zed Books (2011), xiv, 289 pp., abbrev. p.ix-xi, bibliogr. 276-279, index
ISBN 978-1-78032-019-9 (hbk); 978-1-78032-018-2 (pbk)
"In democracies with adjectives, the freedom of press also comes with adjectives." If the political regime is situated between a pure democracy and despotism, the freedom of press is also stuck in an in-between-situation. This statement sums up the results of Marie Soleil Frères empirical analysis of the role of media in reporting the election processes in six central African countries (Burundi, Central African Republic, Congo, DRC, Rwanda and Chad) with a long history of violent conflict. By carving out nine major obstacles of the role of media in these elections from the role of the parties' campaign strategies to the dangerous liaison between media and politics, the book describes how and why their role became problematic, and different from the democracy tool kit of international donors. This may not be a new subject, and most of the findings are familiar to readers with an interest in African media. But the empirical rigor and the in-depth analysis of the cases makes the book a good read and a starting point for a new debate on media support in African election processes." (Commbox-DD)
Contents
Introduction: New Votes And New Voices, 1
1 Elections And The Media In Central Africa: and challenges, 17
2 The Preparatory Phase: The Media’s pre-election commitments, 75
3 The Media During The Election Campaign, 127
4 From Polling Day To The Results, 185
General Conclusion, 238