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Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 43 Nos. 5

Radio, ICT Convergence and Knowledge Brokerage: Lessons from Sub-Saharan Africa

Published on 12 September 2012

This article examines the changing role of radio for development in sub-Saharan Africa as ‘new’ Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) increasingly enter the information landscape.

Grounded in the empirical findings of a research programme – Radio, Convergence and Development in Africa (RCDA) – it explores the potential for convergent communication technologies to improve knowledge transfer and knowledge sharing between development actors at all levels. By drawing on research carried out as part of the RCDA programme, this article raises questions about the ability for radio broadcasters to act as ‘knowledge intermediaries’ in this context – brokering and translating information about development issues between international non-governmental organisations (NGOs), local NGOs, grassroots advocacy groups and local beneficiaries. It draws attention to the barriers impeding their ability to fulfill this role by highlighting issues related to ICT convergence, capacity, funding and ‘NGO-isation’.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 43.5 (2012) Radio, ICT Convergence and Knowledge Brokerage: Lessons from Sub‐Saharan Africa

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Gilberds, H. and Myers, M. (2012) Radio, ICT Convergence and Knowledge Brokerage: Lessons from Sub?Saharan Africa. IDS Bulletin 43(5): 76-83

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Authors

Heather Gilberds
Mary Myers

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2012.00366.x

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