Nigerian Press Coverage of the 2015 Elections: What has Ownership Got to Do with It?

International Journal of African and Asian Studies

Authors

  • A. N. Nwammuo Author
  • L. O. Nwachukwu Edegoh Author
  • Uduot Iwok University of Uyo Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60787/03SP-GX87

Keywords:

Nigerian, Press, Coverage, Elections, Ownership
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Abstract

If ownership can make a critical difference in media coverage of issues, then the interesting spectacle in Nigeria where new wave of politicians now establish media houses should result in distinctive journalistic patterns in salient areas especially in the coverage of political events. This study was therefore aimed at examining how four Nigerian newspapers with two ownership structures covered the 2015 elections in Nigeria. The Vanguard and The Guardian newspapers (owned by businessmen) and The Sun and The Nation newspapers (owned by politicians) were analysed. The scope of the study was between December 2014 to April 2015, and 6398 stories were got from 92 copies of the four dailies. Findings indicated that newspapers owned by politicians were guided by the political interest of their financiers while newspapers owned by businessmen were neutral in the coverage of the 2015 elections. This study confirms Altschull’s (1984) theory of media ownership and therefore concludes that media products reflect the preferences of the dominant power structures.

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Published

2015-09-01

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How to Cite

Nwammuo, A. N., Nwachukwu Edegoh, L. O., & Iwok, U. (2015). Nigerian Press Coverage of the 2015 Elections: What has Ownership Got to Do with It? International Journal of African and Asian Studies. Afrischolar Discovery Repository (Annex). https://doi.org/10.60787/03SP-GX87

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