
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The origins of The Standard and The Nation The origins of The Standard and The Nation
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Post-colonial politics and media controls Post-colonial politics and media controls
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Enter peace journalism Enter peace journalism
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The media and development journalism The media and development journalism
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The media and Kenya’s “big men” The media and Kenya’s “big men”
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Beyond The Standard and The Nation Beyond The Standard and The Nation
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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20 The role of traditional media
Get accessDenis Galava is a Kenyan journalist and PhD candidate at the University of Edinburgh, where he is researching the media, rumor, and politics in Africa.
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Published:02 April 2020
Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines how the Kenyan press has adapted to a constantly changing political landscape and media ecosystem, from the colonial period to Uhuru Kenyatta’s presidency. It interrogates the roles of key actors over this period—press owners, journalists, and successive political regimes—whose interests have helped to shape the moral and practical trajectories of reporting. Using the Daily Nation and The Standard newspapers as case studies, the chapter argues that despite the constantly waxing and waning relationship between the media and the government over time, the press in Kenya is part of ideological state apparatuses and other hegemonic structures that help to “manufacture consent” amid broader discourse over the place of democracy in Kenya’s elections. It concludes that the press was founded to secure and enhance the interests of its owners, not to expand the bounds of debate and expression.
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