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Alternative Media, Repression and the Crisis State: Towards a Political Economy of Alternative Media in Post - Mugabe Zimbabwe

dc.contributor.authorTshabangu, Thulani
dc.contributor.authorSalawu, Abiodun
dc.contributor.researchID38032163
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-20T08:06:37Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.descriptionJournal Article, Faculty of Humanities, (Indigenous Language Media In Africa (ILMA))--North-West University, Mafikeng Campus
dc.description.abstractZimbabwe has a tainted media history under Mugabe replete with examples of state orchestrated repression, draconian legislation, harassment of journalists and violation of their work premises. The post-November 2017 coup period is a critical reference point to understand the political economy of alternative media under the so-called ‘New Dispensation’ of President Mnangagwa with its promises of prodemocracy reforms. Using political economy as a theoretical approach that analyses media systems in a holistic manner by linking them to politics, economy, legislation and technology, this study assesses the extent to which the ‘New Dispensation’ has implemented political economy reforms that impact alternative media. Drawing from interviews with selected alternative media journalists and proprietors, the findings reveal that alternative media in Zimbabwe remain entrenched in repression and are in a crisis caused by an exacerbation of the same structural factors that existed before. The ‘New Dispensation’ has instead led to the entrenchment of a new dictatorship by the military junta. Undue political interference, a fragile economy and state orchestrated repression continue to constrain the democratic functions of alternative media. By teasing the continuities and discontinuities of alternative media repression during the Mugabe era and under the ‘New Dispensation’, the paper contributes to ongoing debates about the consequence of the 2017 coup and the need for genuine democratic reforms in Zimbabwe post-Mugabe epoch.
dc.identifier.citationTshabangu, Thulani & Salawu, Abiodun. 2024. Alternative Media, Repression and the Crisis State: Towards a Political Economy of Alternative Media in Post - Mugabe Zimbabwe. Journal of Asian and African Studies, (2024), 59(1):002190962211060, [DOI:10.1177/00219096221106090]
dc.identifier.uriDOI:10.1177/00219096221106090
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/46236
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherJournal of Asian and African Studies
dc.subjectZimbabwe
dc.subjectPolitical Economy
dc.subjectAlternative Media
dc.subjectMugabeism
dc.subject‘New Dispensation’
dc.subjectAuthoritarianism
dc.subjectMainstream Media
dc.titleAlternative Media, Repression and the Crisis State: Towards a Political Economy of Alternative Media in Post - Mugabe Zimbabwe
dc.typeArticle

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