Prelims

Digitisation, AI and Algorithms in African Journalism and Media Contexts

ISBN: 978-1-80455-136-3, eISBN: 978-1-80455-135-6

Publication date: 14 December 2023

Citation

(2023), "Prelims", Dralega, C.A. (Ed.) Digitisation, AI and Algorithms in African Journalism and Media Contexts, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxi. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-135-620231011

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Copyright © 2024 Carol Azungi Dralega. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


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Digitisation, AI and Algorithms in African Journalism and Media Contexts

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Digitisation, AI and Algorithms in African Journalism and Media Contexts: Practice, Policy and Critical Literacies

Edited by

Carol Azungi Dralega

NLA University College, Norway

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

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First edition 2024

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ISBN: 978-1-80455-136-3 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-80455-135-6 (Online)

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Dedication

To my Late father Mr Jerome Dralega whose great sacrifices, wisdom and love are the reason for all my successes. To Late David Dralega, for unconditional love and for being the best big brother a little girl could ever ask for. To my children, Aleni and Amani, for sustaining me. I hope you are proud of your mamma. To all ‘team Azungi’ for being in my corner. And to God, for unconditional love and for being my rock and anchor.

About the Editor

Carol Azungi Dralega is a Professor at the Department of Journalism, Media and Communication, NLA University College, Norway. She is involved in several research projects including Violence-Inducing Behaviour Prevention in Social-Cyber Space of Local Communities Funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2022–2026). Preparing Media Practitioners for a Resilient Media in Eastern Africa funded by the Norwegian Development Agency (2021–2026). Other recent projects include Beyond the Gender Paradox: Women's Careers in Technology-Driven Research and Innovation in and Outside of Academe, funded by NORDFORSK (2017–2022). Building Capacity for a Changing Media Environment in Uganda funded by the Norwegian Development Agency (2014–2021). Dralega has co-edited two books: Dralega, C. A and Napakol A. (2022) Health Crises and Media Discourses in Sub-Saharan Africa. Springer Nature and Dralega, C. A and Napakol A. (2022) Covid 19 and the Media in Sub-Saharan Africa: Media Viability, Framing and Strategic Crisis Communication. Emerald Publishers.

About the Contributors

Raheemat Adeniran, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Communication and Media Studies Lagos State University, Lagos, Nigeria. Raheemat holds a PhD in Communication Studies (2018) from Lagos State University and has research interest in journalism studies, health communication and misinformation studies. She was a 2020 Fact-checking Research fellow with Dubawa, Nigeria's first indigenous fact-checking organisation. Among her most recent publication is: ‘Èèwộ: Cultural issues mediating the coverage of maternal and child healthcare experiences in the Nigerian press’ in Public Relations Inquiry, https://doi.org/10.1177%2F2046147X211014072. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6247-8216.

Amia Pamela is a student at the Uganda Christian University, currently pursuing a Master’s of Journalism and Media studies. She has a background in journalism.

Kodwo Anson Jonas Boateng is a Senior Lecturer at the Ghana Institute of Journalism. His research interests include Development communication, Crisis communication, Political Economy of Communication, Media systems and CSR. His recent publications include Face-to Face with COVID-19: Experiences of Ghanaian Frontline Journalists Infected with the Virus (2022), Expanding of Empirical Enquiry into Feminist Media studies in Africa (2018) including ‘Experts Experiencing Journalism for Civic Involvement in Development (JOCID)’ Project in Pyorre, Susanna and Alanko, Pia (eds) Shaping the Perspectives of Future Journalists (2015) and other ongoing projects under review.

Redeemer Buatsi is a graduate student at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. His research interests include social media, media and politics and health communication. He recently co-authored a research paper titled ‘Face-to Face with COVID-19: Experiences of Ghanaian Frontline Journalists Infected with the Virus (2022)’ which sought to examine the experiences of Ghanaian journalists who contracted the coronavirus in line of duty.

John Bulani is a Lecturer in the Media and Communication Department at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa. His research interest is in the area of community media and changing journalism ecologies in the radio space. Bulani holds a Master's of Public Relations degree from Cape Peninsula University of Technology.

Margaret Jjuuko, PhD, is an Associate professor of Journalism, Media and Communication studies at the University of Rwanda, School of Journalism and Communication. She holds a PhD and a MA in Journalism and Media Studies from Rhodes University, South Africa, and a Bachelor’s of Mass Communication from Makerere University, Uganda. Her research interests are, among others, in the areas of political communication, environment and climate change, Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), media policy and ethics, media education and social justice in relation to gender and children's rights and issues.

Bai Santigie Kanu is currently a Global Journalism master's student at NLA University College Kristiansand, Norway. He is a development-oriented media practitioner, public relations graduate with an emphasis on professional communication, human rights, broadcasting and administrative management, media outreach, good governance, media ethics.

Gezahgn Berhie Kidanu is a Lecturer in the department of Journalism and Communication at Bahir Dar University. He is enroled in MA in Global Journalism at NLA University in Norway.

Irene Larraz is a PhD student at the University of Navarra in Spain, conducting research on the use of artificial intelligence for automated fact-checking. As part of her research, she has undertaken a doctoral visiting stay at Duke University to observe the work of the Duke Reporters' Lab. Additionally, she works as a journalist at Newtral, a fact-checking media outlet, where she tests these tools and collaborates on experiments to advance technology development. She is also responsible for Newtral Educación, the company's media literacy division. Furthermore, she has served as a Fellow of the JournalismAI Programme at the London School of Economics, where she developed an AI project.

Ivan Nathanael Lukanda is a Lecturer, Department of Journalism and Communication, Makerere University, Uganda.

Blessing Makwambeni is a Senior Lecturer and Postgraduate Coordinator in the Media and Communication Department at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology in South Africa. He also serves as the Faculty of Informatics and Design Research Ethics Chair. Blessing holds a PhD in Communication from the University of Fort Hare, South Africa and has previously taught Journalism and Media Studies at the National University of Science and Technology in Zimbabwe. His research interests lie in the broad areas of political communication, audience studies, development communication and strategic communication.

Trust Matsilele is a Senior Lecturer in the Media and Communication Department at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa. He published a monograph titled ‘Social Media and Digital Dissidence in Zimbabwe in 2022’ and in 2023 a co-edited a book titled ‘New Journalism Ecologies in East and Southern Africa’, both titles were published by Palgrave Macmillan. Matsilele holds a PhD in Communication Studies from the University of Johannesburg, South Africa.

Daniel Kudakwashe Mpala holds a Master's in Global Journalism from NLA University College in Norway. He has a background in technology and business journalism, and is a former editor of Synapse magazine, an Africa-focused AI & Data Science trade publication.

Emmanuel Munyarukumbuzi is an Assistant Lecturer at The African Leadership University. He holds a Master’s of Communication (Bond University, Australia) and a Bachelor’s of Communication (National University of Rwanda). His research interests are in the areas of communication for development, media literacy, human rights, corporate social responsibility and the deployment of ICTs in communication.

Florence Namasinga Selnes is a postdoctoral research fellow, Department of Journalism and Media Studies, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway. Florence is interested in teenagers' understanding (of) and experiences with fake news on social media. She has published about journalists' safety, media laws and journalism practice, gender and journalism education, social media and political activism, among others.

Sandiso Ngcobo is an Associate Professor and Head of the Department (Communication) at Mangosuthu University of Technology (MUT) where he has taught communication and research methodology since 2003. He holds a PhD in Linguistics from the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) which he obtained in 2011. Prof Ngcobo has successfully supervised nine MBA students from Management College of Southern Africa (MANCOSA) and one from Durban University of Technology (DUT). In 2014, he received two awards from MUT, the Vice Chancellor's Teaching and Learning Excellence award and Most Productive Researcher in the Faculty of Management Sciences. Prof Ngcobo won the 2019 MUT Best Established Teacher Award, One of the Top University Publishers at DUT in 2016, Teaching Advancement at University (TAU) award (also in 2016). Prof Ngcobo has, throughout the years, published over 20 journal articles, chapters in books and conference proceedings and presented papers at national and international conferences in different countries across the globe.

Wise Kwame Osei is a Master’s student in Global Journalism at NLA University College in Norway. He has a background in journalism.

Toyosi Olugbenga Samson Owolabi is a Senior Lecturer and holds a PhD in Journalism and Development from Strathclyde University, United Kingdom. Prior to this, he obtained a Bachelor's Degree in Language and Linguistics from the University of Ilorin, MA (Linguistics) and MA (Language and Communication Arts) from University of Ibadan in addition to a Postgraduate Diploma (Journalism) from the Nigerian Institute of Journalism. He teaches journalism, media and development communication in Lagos State University. Also, he at different times taught Mass Communication at Igbinedion University and Benson Idahosa University, respectively. He had been Group Political Editor and Member, Editorial Board of Concord Group of Newspapers. He was also Editor, Credit Market Magazines, all in Lagos. He is widely published locally and internationally. Some of his recent publications include: ‘The political economy of indigenous language media in Nigeria and the challenge of survival in the digital age’ in Salawu, A. (ed.). African Language Media: Development, Economics and Management, New York: Routledge. DOI: 10.4324/9781003004738-3. ‘Ethnic Diversity and Human Capital Development in The Digital Age’ In. E.K. Ngwainmbi (ed.) Dismantling Cultural Borders Through Social Media: How Networked Communities Compromise Identity, New York, NY: Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 164–190. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-92212-2_8. ORCID: https://orcid.org/my-orcid?orcid=0000.0001-8601-7409.

Witness Roya is a postdoctoral fellow at Mangosuthu University of Technology (MUT) in the Department of Communication. He is a holder of a PhD in Communication from the University of Fort Hare. Dr Roya has vast teaching experience accumulated in Zimbabwe and South Africa. He has a few publications to his name. In September 2021, his article titled ‘Kwayedza Newspaper's Coverage of the Covid-19 Crisis in Zimbabwe: The Development of African Languages’ was published by the International Journal of Research and Business Studies (IJRBS) and on the 13th of March 2023, a chapter that he wrote featured in ‘African Language Media - 1st Edition’ which was published by Taylor and Francis. More of his work is either under review or in press.

Gerald Walulya is a Lecturer and masters' programs coordinator, Department of Journalism and Communication, Makerere University, Uganda.

Foreword

The hype surrounding the launch of a Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT that is capable of producing high-quality essays with minimal human input and Alphabet's conversational artificial intelligence (AI) service, Bard, is indicative of the accelerated growth in the area of AI, algorithms, bots and other autonomous agents. ChatGPT and Bard, join a number of many other AI-driven apps and platforms of the past decade, that leverage deep learning and natural language processing to mimic human behaviours, imitate or replace human users to perform certain tasks commonly associated with human beings. Recent AI advances have uses that cut across all sectors and functions that humans do today. AI is transforming all sectors of society, including the journalism.

How do AI services, tools and infrastructures impact on the profession of journalism? AI applications and services transcend virtual every aspect of journalism, from newsgathering, production, distribution and business analytics (Marconi, 2020; Simon, 2022). AI is increasingly pervasive in everyday mundane tasks such as selected a film on Netflix and casually browsing through popular social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, TikTok and Instagram. Recommendation algorithms embedded in the social media platforms provide newsfeeds that inadvertently lead to stories in the media. The same algorithms enable the media houses to broadcast their latest news and headlines on social media. The impact of social media on journalism practices and news consumption patterns have attracted the attention of researchers in Africa (Daniels, 2016; Jordaan, 2013; Verweij & van Noort, 2014).

How is AI impacting on the newsgathering practices, globally and in the African context? Global trends in the field show that the AI is driving precursor processes to news reporting by leveraging information seeking and processing processes in the newsgathering stage. Information discovery via social media, digital databases and search engines like Google Search are increasingly mediated through AI-enabled data processing software, that sift through big data, filters, sorts and recommends material input that enable journalists to write their stories. The influence of AI does not end in the newsgathering stage but permeates also the news production phase through editing and formatting of content, data visualisation, tagging, publication and archiving. There are indeed various other areas where AI is being leveraged. Commenting on the use of AI in financial reporting, an executive of an American media corporation, CNBC aptly captures what an advanced application of AI can do in the context of financial newsgathering and analysis, ‘We will take 5,000 balance sheets, read it within seconds, be able to extract all the financial information, calculate a risk score, and be able to make a decision on the risk of a portfolio’ (Rosenbaum, 2023). This a typical scenario in highly digitalised environments, where much of the information exists in digital format. That remains a distant horizon for journalists in many African countries that still grapple with the realities of digital divide.

Realities on the ground show that the digitalisation tools are not commonplace. Media technology continues to pose a major problem for media houses. Unreliable electricity supplies, low and costly internet connectivity and capacity, outdated equipment mean that some journalists have no adequate access to modern tools that efficiently leverages the AI-enhanced capacities and affordances. The adoption of digital technology remains complex.

Data-driven journalism, though still at its nascent stages of development in most Africa countries is gained traction in the newsrooms. Research on Africa newsrooms has shown an increased practice of data-driven journalism (Mabweazara, 2015; Moyo et al., 2019). Some journalists practice data-driven journalism even though they do not consider themselves as data journalists (Gondwe & White, 2022). Media houses and journalists continually use social media platforms like Twitter as a journalistic tool for newsgathering, breaking news events, live blogging and crowd-sourcing. AI influences the processes and culture of news selection and dissemination.

This edited volume captures explore the current developments on Artificial intelligence (AI), algorithms and data or metrics-driven practices in the African newsrooms. The contributors underscore the various uses, opportunities and limitations of AI in the African context. They provide insights on the current trends on data-driven journalism. AI is being leverage for problem-solving initiatives such as combating the scourge of fake news and other forms of disinformation.

Ndlela, PhD

Professor

Inland Norway School of Business and Social Sciences, Norway

References Daniels, 2016 Daniels, G. (2016). Chasing hashtag#25 in the newsroom presents challenges for journalism education. But what are they? African Journalism Studies, 37(2), 118. doi:10.1080/23743670.2016.1173570 Gondwe and White, 2022 Gondwe, G. , & White, R. A. (2022). Data journalism practice in sub-Saharan African media systems: A cross-national survey of journalists' perceptions in Zambia and Tanzania. African Journalism Studies, 43(2), 2136. doi:10.1080/23743670.2021.1929368 Jordaan, 2013 Jordaan, M. (2013). Poke me, I'm a journalist: The impact of Facebook and Twitter on newsroom routines and cultures at two South African weeklies. Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies, 34(1), 2135. doi:10.1080/02560054.2013.767421 Mabweazara, 2015 Mabweazara, H. M. (2015). Mainstreaming African digital cultures, practices and emerging forms of citizen engagement. African Journalism Studies, 36(4), 111. doi:10.1080/23743670.2015.1119486 Marconi, 2020 Marconi, F. (2020). Newsmakers: Artificial intelligence and the future of journalism. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. Moyo et al., 2019 Moyo, D. , Mare, A. , & Matsilele, T. (2019). Analytics-driven journalism? Editorial metrics and the reconfiguration of online news production practices in African newsrooms. Digital Journalism, 7(4), 490506. doi:10.1080/21670811.2018.1533788 Rosenbaum, 2023 Rosenbaum, E. (2023). The ChatGPT AI hype cycle is peaking, but even tech skeptics don't expect a bust. Technology Executive Council. Retrieved from https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/11/chatgpt-ai-hype-cycle-is-peaking-but-even-tech-skeptics-doubt-a-bust.html Simon, 2022 Simon, F. M. (2022). Uneasy bedfellows: AI in the news, platform companies and the issue of journalistic autonomy. Digital Journalism, 123. doi:10.1080/21670811.2022.2063150 Verweij and van Noort, 2014 Verweij, P. , & van Noort, E. (2014). Journalists' twitter networks, public debates and relationships in South Africa. Digital Journalism, 2(1), 98114. doi:10.1080/21670811.2013.850573

Preface

In 2019, I attended a conference in Bergen, Norway on AI-driven journalism. One presentation captured my interest. It was made by an editor at one of the large regional newspapers who shared his newsroom's approach to AI-driven journalism giving fascinating insights into the post-humanist era that we find ourselves in today. One particular example of interest involved an international investigative story that was covered using AI, algorithms and data. It was a splendid integrated human-centred approach using technology to investigate, monitor and visually present the story in real time to consumers. This was in a Nordic newsroom context, so what was the status in African newsrooms contexts, I wondered! Currently, the research is sparse but then, it was almost non-existent and that is how Digitisation, AI and Algorithms in African Journalism and Media Contexts: Practice, Policy and Critical Literacies was born – out of academic curiosity and the need to fill knowledge gaps from eastern African contexts.

The literature is budding. AI, algorithms and data-driven practices are already pervading all sectors of societies across the globe (Stalph, 2020). It is safe to say that AI and algorithms are the present ‘power brokers’ governing, what information is produced, consumed and what networks they engage with (Emmert-Streib, 2021). The media industry is one of the sectors that is increasingly embracing AI, algorithms and data to harness the ever-changing potential of information and communication technologies. The Reuters Institute report (2022) projected that algorithms, AI and data-uptake within newsrooms would increase in the near future. The explosion of ChatGPT in November 2022 and similar tools affirms this prediction, a factor acerbated by the dramatic digital influx of consumers, advertisers and media outlets that we saw with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic (Dralega & Napakol, 2022a, 2022b).

Already before the pandemic, AI, robots, algorithms and data/metrics were pervasive in many newsrooms, increasingly dictating and rapidly changing journalistic and newsroom practices, cultures and norms, i.e. from editorial agenda setting, to news production processes, to audience and advertiser targeting (Moyo et al., 2019). Social media platforms have particularly been at the core of the AI and algorithmic turn offering real-time consumer analytics and newsfeeds for insatiable and borderless digital citizens. The algorithms within these platforms make them powerful news aggregators, redirecting consumer habits and advertisers, making them vital in the journalism practice and media viability across the globe (Ali & Hassoun, 2019).

Nevertheless, the scholarship on AI, algorithms and data-driven journalism from the Global South especially in sub-Saharan Africa context remains sparse (Mutsvairo, Bebawi, & Borges-Rey, 2020; Gondwe & White, 2022). Most of the empirical studies are Western-oriented. Moreover, there are knowledge gaps relating to the post-Covid state of AI, algorithms and data-driven journalism as well as the implications for political, social, cultural, markets and media viability. As a social construct, technology appropriation often comes with repercussions – so what are the prospects and repercussions on the development and democratic agenda especially in reference to Universal declarations and SDGs/2030 Agenda for sustainable development? Debates on the role of international players in the AI/data journalism practices in the Global South, especially in the modernisation theoretical and post-colonial perspectives. Can the AI/data journalism optimism found in the western world be transferred to the Global South wholesomely? The unresolved consequences around issues on the digital divide and marginalisation need to be brought to the research agenda. In this volume, insights are also shared on policy developments, media education and critical literacy fields (Kothari & Hickerson, 2020), which are largely research deserts.

This edited book provides new knowledge on some of the key issues surrounding automation, algorithms, data-driven journalism and digitisation in post-truth, post-human and post-Covid sub-Saharan Africa contexts. It includes highly rigorous theoretical and empirical chapters unveiling related media innovations and developments. It also includes, interdisciplinary perspectives, comparative, ethnographic studies along with multi-genre (i.e. Social media, Television, Newspapers, Radio, community/alternative media, etc.) perspectives and methodologies. This book is a welcome resource for media researchers, students, academics, media practitioners and policymakers who seek to understand and make sense of these 4IR technologies and how they are set to revolutionise journalism practice in sub-Saharan Africa. Potential investors interested in AI solutions for Journalism (education/training, app development) in African contexts would also find this book of interest.

This volume would not have been possible without the Emerald Team who provided guidance and support throughout the processes. Special gratitude to all the authors without whose rigorous, critical contributions and patience, there would not be a book. I am also eternally grateful to the reviewers who took their time to offer valuable and constructive feedback that enriched the quality of the chapters. I am also deeply grateful to NLA University College for supporting this project. Asante!

10.06.2023

Carol Azungi Dralega

Kristiansand, Norway

References Ali and Hassoun, 2019 Ali, W. , & Hassoun, M. (2019). Artificial intelligence and automated journalism: Contemporary challenges and new opportunities. Journalism and Mass Communication, 5(1), 4049. Dralega, 2022a Dralega, C. A. , & Napakol, A. (Eds.). (2022a). Health crises and media discourses in Sub-Saharan Africa (p. 283). Cham: Springer Nature. Dralega, 2022b Dralega, C. A. , & Napakol, A. (Eds.). (2022b). COVID-19 and the media in Sub-Saharan Africa: Media viability, framing and health communication. Bingley: Emerald Publishing Limited. Emmert-Streib, 2021 Emmert-Streib, F. (2021). From the digital data revolution toward a digital society: Pervasiveness of artificial intelligence. Machine Learning and Knowledge Extraction, 3(1), 284–298. Gondwe and White, 2022 Gondwe, G. , & White, R. A. (2022). Data journalism practice in Sub-Saharan African media systems: A cross-national survey of journalists’ perceptions in Zambia and Tanzania. African Journalism Studies, 43(2), 2136. Mutsvairo, 2020 Mutsvairo, B. , Bebawi, S. , & Borges-Rey, E. (Eds.). (2020). Data journalism in the Global South. Springer Nature. Moyo, 2019 Moyo, D., Mare, A., & Matsilele, T. (2019). Analytics-driven journalism? Editorial metrics and the reconfiguration of online news production practices in African newsrooms. Digital Journalism, 7(4), 490–506. doi:10.1080/21670811.2018.1533788 Reuters Institute, 2022 Reuters Institute . (2022). Digital News Report 2022. University of Oxford. Retrieved from https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/2022-06/Digital_News-Report_2022.pdf Stalph, 2020 Stalph, F. (2020). Evolving data teams: Tensions between organisational structure and professional subculture. Big Data & Society, 7(1). doi:10.1177/2053951720919964