Highway Africa Conference 2009
Monday, July 6, 2009 - 15:06
Highway Africa is a partnership between Rhodes University (School of Journalism and Media Studies) and the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), with the support of several partners, development agencies and sponsors.
For twelve years the Highway Africa conference has been at the centre of Africa’s debates on journalism and new media. The conference has over the years become the largest annual gathering of African journalists in the world (735 in 2008).
In the last five years Highway Africa has evolved into a multi-pronged programme with the following components:
Research: mapping the terrain of the challenges of the interface of technology, journalism and the media
Education and Training: responding to the gaps identified in the research this project makes a practical intervention by re-skilling, upskilling, educating and training journalists.
News Agency: a niche news agency with a network of correspondents across the continent it offers weekly news digest on ICT developments in Africa
Conference: the flagship of the programme, it is the forum for critical reflection on journalism, media and technology and a celebration of Africa
In 2010, South Africa hosts the FIFA World Football Cup. As we head for the world’s biggest spectacle, taking place in Africa for the very first time, it is imperative that African journalism and media prepare on how the 2010 Story will told.
Highway Africa Conference 2009 will be both a celebration and an interrogation of journalism and media and their role in sport, identity and the African agenda.
Using its various platforms of plenary sessions, keynote addresses, training workshops, book launches, networking dinners and debates, HA 2009 will be at the forefront of celebrating and interrogating the meaning of 2010.
Although the main focus would be on sport reporting there will be key sessions on development and democracy and how African media has reported on the crisis. Via addresses and interactions with key players, analysts and academics, journalists will reflect on the unfolding financial crisis and on their own reporting and framing of this global phenomenon. In the lead to the Highway Africa conference a series of one-day events will be held that will seek to interrogate some of the emerging issues around the crisis and the media.
Theme: Reporting Africa - 2010, Development and Democracy
Enquiries: Chris Kabwato, Director, Highway Africa, email: C.Kabwato@ru.ac.za, tel: 046 603 7187.
For more information or to register, click here.
For twelve years the Highway Africa conference has been at the centre of Africa’s debates on journalism and new media. The conference has over the years become the largest annual gathering of African journalists in the world (735 in 2008).
In the last five years Highway Africa has evolved into a multi-pronged programme with the following components:
Research: mapping the terrain of the challenges of the interface of technology, journalism and the media
Education and Training: responding to the gaps identified in the research this project makes a practical intervention by re-skilling, upskilling, educating and training journalists.
News Agency: a niche news agency with a network of correspondents across the continent it offers weekly news digest on ICT developments in Africa
Conference: the flagship of the programme, it is the forum for critical reflection on journalism, media and technology and a celebration of Africa
In 2010, South Africa hosts the FIFA World Football Cup. As we head for the world’s biggest spectacle, taking place in Africa for the very first time, it is imperative that African journalism and media prepare on how the 2010 Story will told.
Highway Africa Conference 2009 will be both a celebration and an interrogation of journalism and media and their role in sport, identity and the African agenda.
Using its various platforms of plenary sessions, keynote addresses, training workshops, book launches, networking dinners and debates, HA 2009 will be at the forefront of celebrating and interrogating the meaning of 2010.
Although the main focus would be on sport reporting there will be key sessions on development and democracy and how African media has reported on the crisis. Via addresses and interactions with key players, analysts and academics, journalists will reflect on the unfolding financial crisis and on their own reporting and framing of this global phenomenon. In the lead to the Highway Africa conference a series of one-day events will be held that will seek to interrogate some of the emerging issues around the crisis and the media.
Theme: Reporting Africa - 2010, Development and Democracy
Enquiries: Chris Kabwato, Director, Highway Africa, email: C.Kabwato@ru.ac.za, tel: 046 603 7187.
For more information or to register, click here.
Event type:
Conference
Event venue:
Eden Grove Complex, Rhodes University, Grahamstown
Event start date:
05/09/2009
Event end date:
09/09/2009 Vacancies
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