Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications (Jan 2021)

The Politics of Impunity and the Shifting Media Landscape in Kenya

  • Philip Onguny

DOI
https://doi.org/10.30958/ajmmc.7-1-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 61 – 78

Abstract

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This article focuses on state-media relations and the shifts in the overall media landscape in Kenya. Drawing on a political economy approach to media operations in Kenya, it argues that while there are competing meanings over what constitutes "news values", "editorial independence", and "critical media", changes in political regimes and unclear media regulations contribute to political and/or corporate interference on media coverage of corruption and political impunity. This renders media operations problematic at the normative and operational levels. The discussion situates these arguments within the contexts of "policy laundering" and "critical junctures", seeking to establish whether the shifting media landscape is a function of increased information and communication affordability or, instead, an indication that critical media are on the decline. Overall, the article provides an assessment of key temporal periods that have shaped media regulatory frameworks to show how political and/or corporate interests have influenced journalistic practices and editorial independence over time and space.

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