Introducing Francis Nyamnjoh


  • nyamjoh-2bsepia Francis B. Nyamnjoh is Associate Professor and Head of Publications and Dissemination with the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA).

    Avenue Cheikh Anta Diop X Canal IV BP 3304, CP 18524 Dakar, Senegal EMAIL

  • Bibliography


  • LOGO-CODESRIA-copy2

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz

Conception & Design


  • Jimbi Media

  • domainad1

Jimbi Media Sites

  • AFRICAphonie
    AFRICAphonie is a Pan African Association which operates on the premise that AFRICA can only be what AFRICANS and their friends want AFRICA to be.
  • Bakwerirama
    Spotlight on Bakweri Society and Culture. The Bakweri are an indigenous African nation.
  • Bate Besong
    Bate Besong, award-winning firebrand poet and playwright.
  • Bernard Fonlon
    Dr Bernard Fonlon was an extraordinary figure who left a large footprint in Cameroonian intellectual, social and political life.
  • Fonlon-Nichols Award
    Website of the Literary Award established to honor the memory of BERNARD FONLON, the great Cameroonian teacher, writer, poet, and philosopher, who passionately defended human rights in an often oppressive political atmosphere.
  • France Watcher
    Purpose of this advocacy site: To aggregate all available information about French terror, exploitation and manipulation of Africa
  • George Ngwane: Public Intellectual
    George Ngwane is a prominent author, activist and intellectual.
  • Jacob Nguni
    Virtuoso guitarist, writer and humorist. Former lead guitarist of Rocafil, led by Prince Nico Mbarga.
  • Martin Jumbam
    The refreshingly, unique, incisive and generally hilarous writings about the foibles of African society and politics by former Cameroon Life Magazine columnist Martin Jumbam.
  • Nowa Omoigui
    Professor of Medicine and interventional cardiologist, Nowa Omoigui is also one of the foremost experts and scholars on the history of the Nigerian Military and the Nigerian Civil War. This site contains many of his writings and comments on military subjects and history.
  • PostNewsLine
    PostNewsLine is an interactive feature of 'The Post', an important newspaper published out of Buea, Cameroons.
  • Postwatch Magazine
    A UMI (United Media Incorporated) publication. Specializing in well researched investigative reports, it focuses on the Cameroonian scene, particular issues of interest to the former British Southern Cameroons.
  • Simon Mol
    Cameroonian poet, writer, journalist and Human Rights activist living in Warsaw, Poland
  • Victor Mbarika ICT Weblog
    Victor Wacham Agwe Mbarika is one of Africa's foremost experts on Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). Dr. Mbarika's research interests are in the areas of information infrastructure diffusion in developing countries and multimedia learning.
  • Tunduzi
    A West African in Arusha at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda on the angst, contradictions and rewards of that process.
  • Dr Godfrey Tangwa (Gobata)
  • Francis Nyamnjoh
    Prolific writer, social and political commentator, he was a professor at University of Buea and University of Botswana. Currently he is Head of Publications and Dissemination at CODESRIA in Dakar, Senegal. His writings are socially relevant and engaging even to the non specialist.
  • Ilongo Sphere: Writer and Poet

Google








Posts categorized "Media"

Journalism in Africa: Modernity, Africanity

By Francis B. Nyamnjoh (Originally published in Rhodes Journalism Review No. 25, November 2005, pages 3-6)

The basic assumptions underpinning African Journalism in definition and practice, are not informed by the fact that ordinary Africans are busy Africanizing their modernity and modernizing their Africanity in ways often too complex for simplistic dichotomies to capture.
Journalism_africa2

Continue reading "Journalism in Africa: Modernity, Africanity" »

Pipers, Tunes and Global Hierarchies in African Publishing

By Francis B. Nyamnjoh (originally published in Bookmark: News Magazine of the South African Booksellers’ Association, July-September 2006, pp.29-30)

Drawing on his own foray into the world of South African publishing, Dr. Francis Nyamnjoh unpacks some of the challenges facing African literature – on the African continent. He questions the tacit acceptance that there is only limited space available for work written and published by Africans. This article does not seek to provide practical solutions to the economic, distribution and marketing issues but rather focuses on some of the ideological dimensions of publishing Africa.

Continue reading "Pipers, Tunes and Global Hierarchies in African Publishing" »

From publish or perish to publish and perish: What ‘Africa’s 100 Best Books’ tell us about publishing Africa

By Francis B. Nyamnjoh

This paper has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Asian and African Studies (JAAS) and the final (edited, revised and typeset) version of this paper will be published in the Journal of Asian and African Studies, Vol 39(4), 2004 by Sage Publications Ltd, All rights reserved.© Sage Publications Ltd, 2004.

Abstract:

This paper draws on the African publishing industry initiative to determine ‘Africa’s 100 Best Books of the 20th Century’, to discuss writing, scholarship and publishing in and on Africa. It argues that it is not enough to publish or read about Africa, just as it is not enough to pass for an African writer or scholar. There is need to problematise what is published and read on Africa, and how sympathetic to Africa, culturally, morally and scientifically authors and publications are.

Continue reading "From publish or perish to publish and perish: What ‘Africa’s 100 Best Books’ tell us about publishing Africa" »

West Africa: Unprofessional and unethical journalism

By Francis Nyamnjoh

In the name of freedom

Africa_media The current democratic process in West Africa has brought with it not only multipartyism, but also a sort of media pluralism. In almost every country the number of private newspapers increased dramatically with the clamour for more representative forms of democracy in the early 1990s. Some countries have also opened up the airwaves while others are still lagging behind. The fact that since independence African governments largely resisted private initiative in the area of broadcasting and waited till the pro-democracy clamours of the 1990s even to contemplate weakening their radio and television monopoly is but a logical continuation of their colonial heritage.

Continue reading "West Africa: Unprofessional and unethical journalism " »

Media ownership and control in Cameroon: Constraints on media freedom

By Francis B. Nyamnjoh

Press_africa The government of Cameroon shows that it is more interested in containing the media politically than in providing its proprietors and practitioners the enabling economic environment they need for professional excellence and financial independence. This has brought about the underdevelopment of the press by imposing on it a series of constraints. No one who knows what a newspaper looks like (in content and form) in Nigeria, Kenya, or South Africa, would take seriously what in Cameroon passes for newspapers.

Continue reading "Media ownership and control in Cameroon: Constraints on media freedom" »

State of the Media in Botswana, 2001

By Francis B. Nyamnjoh

Introduction
The 2000 report on media-government relations in Botswana sounded a relative note of optimism, which has been seriously tempered by events and developments in 2001. Relations between the government and the media have grown tenser, and mutual suspicion between the two has increased remarkably. It would appear that both are fast catching up with the reality of government-media relations elsewhere in Africa, making Botswana’s commitment to liberal democracy under increasing scrutiny. What accounts for such change of tone and direction? In what way have the media and the government given each other reason to rethink the importance of tolerance and freedom of expression as the foundation of liberal democracy in Botswana?

Continue reading "State of the Media in Botswana, 2001" »

The State of the Media in Southern Africa 2000: Botswana

By Francis Nyamnjoh

Introduction
The main development in Botswana in 2000 was in the area of broadcasting. The press, of course, continued to play an active role in the promotion of civil society and democracy. MISA Botswana monitored and reported accordingly on media related issues, and in November there was a sub-regional workshop on Cartoon Journalism and Democratisation in Southern Africa, at the University of Botswana. As the report shows, government-media relations are not, comparatively speaking, characterised by hostility. But there is no room for complacency.

Continue reading "The State of the Media in Southern Africa 2000: Botswana" »

November 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            

Nyamnjoh's Visitor Locator


  • Locations of visitors to this page

Interests and Travel


Sponsors etc



  • effort-copy

  • Festacad

  • afamgotconditionsMembership Sign Up category: You Can Afford Bags! 120 x 90 Button #1Handbags - Duty Free ShippingPure Italian Hand-made Shoes (blue background)125x125 iTunes

  • Try Netflix for Free!

    Lingo - The Talk of Broadband120x90 Brand

  • Super Savings Only From Overstock.com!Generic 120X60_1