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OverviewWhatsApp is the most popular messaging platform in over 80% of countries in West Africa, and a daily port of call for a wide range of information and services. This edited collection seeks to examine the impact that this transformative technology has had beyond the much-discussed role it has played in the spread of misinformation, and explore more widely the fundamental changes that WhatsApp has brought to many citizens' lives in social, economic and political contexts. Ranging across subjects including political organisation, religious practice, and family relations, each author in this volume brings direct knowledge and testimony of the impact of WhatsApp across West African society. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Idayat Hassan (Centre for Democracy and Development, Nigeria) , Jamie Hitchen (Independent Researcher)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Zed Books Ltd Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781350257863ISBN 10: 1350257869 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 20 October 2022 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsFigures and Tables Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION: A NEW PLATFORM FOR OLD NETWORKS? WHATSAPP AND EVERYDAY LIFE IN WEST AFRICA Idayat Hassan and Jamie Hitchen CHAPTER 1: WhatsApp and Political Messaging at the Periphery: Insights from Northern Ghana Gabrielle Lynch, Ghadafi Saibu and Elena Gadjanova CHAPTER 2: WhatsApp, youth and politics in The Gambia: An analysis of ‘Democratic Gambia’ Sait Matty Jaw CHAPTER 3: WhatsApp political campaigns in Nigeria Nwachukwu Egbunike CHAPTER 4: Tailored to fit? WhatsApp marketing in Nigeria’s fashion industry Kolawole Talabi CHAPTER 5: “The Forum”: A WhatsApp support group for health and social service providers during the Anglophone Crisis in Cameroon Kamila Pacholek, Madalina Prostean, Sarah Burris, Lynn Cockburn, Julius Nganji, Anya Nadege, and Louis Mbibeh CHAPTER 6: The dynamics of WhatsApp usage among elderly Nigerians Temitayo Olofinlua CHAPTER 7: New Media, Social Relationships and Communication Imperatives: A study of Christlove Fellowship Alumni WhatsApp groups Feyisitan Ijimakinwa and Fortune Afatakpa CHAPTER 8: Sharing the gospel: How Nigeria’s Catholic community is building a WhatsApp congregation Patrick Egwu CHAPTER 9: Amplifying female voices in northern Nigerian politics: The role of WhatsApp Na’ima Hafiz Abubakar CHAPTER 10: Reinventing the newspaper for the WhatsApp age Simon AllisonReviewsThere are a lot of platitudes about the role of end-to-end encrypted messaging services in society. Yet we know very little about how West Africans use these platforms. This exceptional book fills that gap, leveraging interviews and case studies to shed light on how WhatsApp is shaping politics, the media, trade, and associations. It should be required reading for anyone who wants to move beyond speculation and understand how people are actually using WhatsApp. * Shelby Grossman, Research Scholar, Stanford Internet Observatory * WhatsApp and Everyday life in West Africa is a rich source of material on all that is the power and danger of WhatsApp in Africa: how it is used and the impact of such uses, from the easy of spread of disinformation to democratizing the ability to communicate and engage with a wide audience. Hassan and Hitchen's book is a must have reference for activists, academics and civil society organizations working in human rights, civic engagement, democracy, elections, free press and disinformation, sustainable development. Now more than ever, in a time of ideological cleavages and rising authoritarianism as well as in a time of hope that we can reimagine what our societies can be, we must understand how to ensure the benefits of Whatsapp to our global and local communities, outweighs the disadvantages. * Ayisha Osori, Director, Open Society Foundations * This book is a refreshing take on how WhatsApp is imbricated in the everyday lives of Africans. The contributors and editors complicate the situatedness of WhatsApp in the cultural, social, economic, religious and political imaginary of African communities. They highlight the silenced stories around digital media use bringing attention especially to how marginalized groups like women use the app to subvert patriarchal restrictions on their participation in the public sphere and navigate their everyday lives while mobilizing for change. * Dr. Wunpini Fatimata Mohammed, Assistant Professor of Global Media, University of Georgia, USA * There are a lot of platitudes about the role of end-to-end encrypted messaging services in society. Yet we know very little about how West Africans use these platforms. This exceptional book fills that gap, leveraging interviews and case studies to shed light on how WhatsApp is shaping politics, the media, trade, and associations. It should be required reading for anyone who wants to move beyond speculation and understand how people are actually using WhatsApp. * Shelby Grossman, Research Scholar, Stanford Internet Observatory * Author InformationIdayat Hassan is Director of the Centre for Democracy and Development, an Abuja based policy, advocacy and research organisation with a focus on deepening democracy and development in West Africa. Idayat is a lawyer and has held fellowships in universities across Europe and America. Her interests span democracy, peace and security, transitional justice, and ICT4D across West Africa and her analysis is regularly sought by the BBC, Bloomberg and Voice of America. Jamie Hitchen is an independent researcher who focuses on politics in the social media age in West Africa. He co-authored a chapter on the use of WhatsApp in Sierra Leone’s election to ‘Social Media and Politics in Africa’ (Zed Books) and has published research on Nigeria’s WhatsApp Politics in the Journal of Democracy. He was previously policy researcher at Africa Research Institute and his analysis has been sought by leading international publications including The Economist, Financial Times, BBC and The Guardian. He is an Honorary Research Fellow of the University of Birmingham, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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