Misinformation Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa: From Laws and Regulations to Media Literacy

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Misinformation Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa is a single volume containing two research reports by eight authors examining policy towards misinformation in Sub-Saharan Africa.

The volume first examines the teaching of ‘media literacy’ in state-run schools in seven Sub-Saharan African countries as of mid-2020, as relates to misinformation. It explains the limited elements of media and information literacy (MIL) that are included in the curricula in the seven countries studied and the elements of media literacy related to misinformation taught in schools in one province of South Africa since January 2020. The authors propose six fields of knowledge and skills specific to misinformation that are required in order to reduce students’ susceptibility to false and misleading claims. Identifying obstacles to the introduction and effective teaching of misinformation literacy, the authors make five recommendations for the promotion of misinformation literacy in schools, to reduce the harm misinformation causes.

The second report in the volume examines changes made to laws and regulations related to ‘false information’ in eleven countries across Sub-Saharan Africa 2016-2020 from Ethiopia to South Africa. By examining the terms of such laws against what is known of misinformation types, drivers and effects, it assesses the likely effects of punitive policies and those of more positive approaches that provide accountability in political debate by promoting access to accurate information and corrective speech. In contrast to the effects described for most recent regulations relating to misinformation, the report identifies ways in which legal and regulatory frameworks can be used to promote a healthier information environment.

 

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About the author (2021)

Peter Cunliffe-Jones has been a visiting researcher and Co-Director of a course on media freedom at the University of Westminster since 2019, focusing on misinformation. In 2012, after a career in journalism, he founded the first fact-checking organisation in Africa. After stepping down in 2019, he was named senior advisor to the International Fact-Checking Network (Twitter @PCunliffeJones, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3023-7386).

Assane Diagne is a journalism and media freedom expert based in Dakar, Senegal. A lecturer at the Ecole Supérieure de Journalisme, des Métiers de l’Internet et de la Communication (EJICOM) in Dakar, and former Chief Editor of the Agence de Presse Senegalese, he was in 2019 named West Africa Director of Reporters Without Borders (Twitter @assaned).

Alan Finlay is an Internet and media rights researcher, and lecturer with the University of the Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg, South Africa. He has written extensively on issues of access to information, freedom of expression and Internet rights.

Sahite Gaye is a researcher and lecturer at the Centre d’Etudes des Sciences et des Techniques de l’Information (CESTI) at l’Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar (UCAD) Dakar, Senegal. His focus is on the structures, uses and norms of digital communications among organisations and society, in francophone West Africa in particular (Twitter @SahiteGaye).

Wallace Gichunge is Founder and Executive Director of the Centre for Media and Information Literacy in Kenya, and Africa Region Representative to the UNESCO Global Alliance for Partnerships on Media and Information Literacy. His academic focus is on media literacy, governance and political communication (Twitter @GichungeW).

Chido Onumah is the Coordinator of the African Centre for Media and Information Literacy, in Abuja, Nigeria. His academic focus is on media and information literacy in West Africa, as a means of enhancing democracy and accountability (Twitter: @conumah, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9734-3568).

Cornia Pretorius is a researcher and lecturer in journalism and media studies in the School of Communication of North-West University’s Potchefstroom site in South Africa. The focus of her PhD study is news literacy, disinformation and journalism in South Africa (Twitter @corniap).

Anya Schiffrin is Director of the Technology, Media and Communications specialisation at the School of International and Public Affairs, at Columbia University, United States. She writes on journalism and development around the world (Twitter @anyaSIPA).