The purpose of this article is to explore African form of indigenous mass communication with emphasis on Ethiopian indigenous form mass communication institutions, tools, manuscripts, and regulatory bodies. The method employed for this study is qualitative. First hand documents, tools and observation were considered as sources of primary data. Furthermore, pertinent literature was reviewed. The data was analyzed qualitatively where description of the responses on the bases of themes was given emphasis. The finding of this study argued that drum beating, horn blowing and town crying are a form of mass communications in the ancient time. In ancient time news in Africa was first made public from the tower in the center, squares of the city, pa...
Divisive debates on what constitutes the Ethiopian nation, how the state should be structured and ho...
The role of communications in facilitating public participation in constitution-making is often negl...
Mass communication is not new in Africa. Until the mid-20th century aural surrogate languages were u...
The study of the media’s relation with the political system is a burgeoning area of inquiry in compa...
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston UniversityThe purpose of this thesis is to study the press in Ethiopia. Ethiop...
This entry introduces African modes of communication, covering their history, context, and uses. An ...
ABSTRACT The globalization trend has eaten so deep into our culture and tradition as emerging inform...
Book chapter published in Indigenous Language Media, Language Politics and Democracy in Africa. Edit...
AbstractThe aim of the study was assessing the implications of community-based private media for nat...
This paper is an analysis of how African traditional communication and the literature produced about...
A host of African communication scholars has conducted a lot of studies on conventional media of mas...
The church and state institutions in the history of Ethiopia were considered literate. However, the ...
The purpose of this paper is to make known historical development of written Afaan Oromo to 1900. Th...
Indigenous communication systems are essential element of the socio-cultural tradition of Africans. ...
Development is an important issue for third world Sub-Saharan African countries such as Ethiopia. To...
Divisive debates on what constitutes the Ethiopian nation, how the state should be structured and ho...
The role of communications in facilitating public participation in constitution-making is often negl...
Mass communication is not new in Africa. Until the mid-20th century aural surrogate languages were u...
The study of the media’s relation with the political system is a burgeoning area of inquiry in compa...
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston UniversityThe purpose of this thesis is to study the press in Ethiopia. Ethiop...
This entry introduces African modes of communication, covering their history, context, and uses. An ...
ABSTRACT The globalization trend has eaten so deep into our culture and tradition as emerging inform...
Book chapter published in Indigenous Language Media, Language Politics and Democracy in Africa. Edit...
AbstractThe aim of the study was assessing the implications of community-based private media for nat...
This paper is an analysis of how African traditional communication and the literature produced about...
A host of African communication scholars has conducted a lot of studies on conventional media of mas...
The church and state institutions in the history of Ethiopia were considered literate. However, the ...
The purpose of this paper is to make known historical development of written Afaan Oromo to 1900. Th...
Indigenous communication systems are essential element of the socio-cultural tradition of Africans. ...
Development is an important issue for third world Sub-Saharan African countries such as Ethiopia. To...
Divisive debates on what constitutes the Ethiopian nation, how the state should be structured and ho...
The role of communications in facilitating public participation in constitution-making is often negl...
Mass communication is not new in Africa. Until the mid-20th century aural surrogate languages were u...