The Africa Media Leadership Conference (AMLC) series is the foremost pan-African gathering of senior media professionals on the African continent, and is hosted annually by the Media Programme for Sub-Saharan Africa of the Konrad-Adenauer-Foundation and Rhodes University’s Sol Plaatje Institute for Media Leadership (SPI).
The gathering represents a key opportunity for Africa’s top media leaders to discuss strategic, operational and other challenges in a fast-changing and digitalising media landscape. Since its inception in 2002, the conferences have developed into an annual high-level forum for strategy formulation, networking and sharing by senior African executives of print, broadcast, online and converged media.
2010 edition is about to start
This year’s summit takes place in Dar es Salaam, Tansania, and will focus on finding “Sustainable Media Business Models in the Digital Age”.
On this page, you can follow the conferences discussions and even take part in it by using social media applications. Sessions with Twitter wall will be announced in time.
Source: www.kas.de/wf/en/71.8895/
Role of bloggers comes under spotlight at African media summit
4/10/2010 Are bloggers journalists? Are they operating ethically by upholding the rights and limitations of media freedom? If not, should bloggers be regulated by statutory boards? These and similar questions framed some of the key debates of the just-ended Africa Media Leadership Summit.The three-day summit was attended by nearly 70 media owners, chief executive offers and editors-in-chief of leading media companies from East, West, Southern , Central and North Africa, plus the Horn of Africa, the Caribbean and the US. It was held in Tanzania’s former capital Dar es Salaam. Meeting under the overarching theme of “Sustainable Media Business Models in the Digital Age”, delegates to the Africa Media Leadership Conference (AMLC) heard testimony of successful digital media business models already being run by some of their peers in Africa. They also examined a range of challenges thwarting the sustainability of media and journalism on the continent, especially the lack of appropriate training and skilling among journalists and media managers, and poor editorial content, and suggested practical solutions on how to address these. The conference was in broad agreement that African media needs to take advantage of social media tools such as Facebook and Twitter and mobile phones in serving their audiences, some of whom are increasingly deserting traditional print, radio and television and calling for greater transparency in the way journalists and media companies fulfil their public service roles. The annual conference was the ninth since being established in 2002 by Rhodes University’s Sol Plaaatje Institute (SPI) for Media Leadership and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (KAS), which funds the series which rotate from one African country to another each year. SPI Director Francis Mdlongwa said of the Dar es Salaam summit: “The conference was a huge success, perhaps the best so far, as evidenced by the feedback from most participants. Editors took away several useful lessons and concrete new business models, which they obviously will need to adapt to their own environments.” Frank Windeck, head of the organisation’s Sub-Saharan Media Programme, commented: “We had a good impact on participants. The discussion between the bloggers and the regulator shows how important regulatory frameworks are. Future conferences could discuss further the political implications of the blogosphere and the role of the regulator…” Pictures from the AMLC are available on Flickr at:http://www.flickr.com/search/?w=all&q=Africa+media+leadership+conference+2010&m=text
Citizen journalism, pan-African media, digital media....
To get updates on the proceedings at this conference go to twitter #amlc10Key issues being raised so far at the ALMC include the rise and potential sustainability of 'citizen journalism' within a communications / media environment that is increasingly being defined by digital media and more specifically be features such as blogging and those that come with the world of social media.Of key interest for me are issues concerning pan-African broadcasting and the ways in say cellphones can act as 'media' (if at all?)Best wishes,Andrew.