Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants

After 202 years (1822‒2024) of its inception in the then Gold Coast, now Ghana, and witnessing an unprecedented upsurge in publication since 1992, the circulation of print media appears unevenly distributed between the centre (capital) and the peripheries. Since there are not enough studies that ex...

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Main Author: Jacob Nyarko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2024-12-01
Series:Communicare
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Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2966
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author Jacob Nyarko
author_facet Jacob Nyarko
author_sort Jacob Nyarko
collection DOAJ
description After 202 years (1822‒2024) of its inception in the then Gold Coast, now Ghana, and witnessing an unprecedented upsurge in publication since 1992, the circulation of print media appears unevenly distributed between the centre (capital) and the peripheries. Since there are not enough studies that explore the circulation of print media under Ghana’s fourth republic to show its circulation patterns, this article analyses print distribution figures and views sourced from newspaper firms to examine the situation within the participatory communication and the political economy of the media frameworks. It uncovers that a few newspaper firms have regional offices but do not print in those locations. They function only as bulk distribution and administrative centres that gather news to feed their headquarters in the capital. Ghana’s print industry operates a centre-periphery production and distribution framework. Furthermore, the study unveils that four factors contribute to newspaper concentration in urban centres, namely ownership tendencies, revenue motives, skilled labour availability and seat of government, and urban media credibility. Thus, Ghana experiences wide rural‒urban print disparities which retard timely information sourcing, consensus building and participatory development communication. The findings from the study have implications for Africa.
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publishDate 2024-12-01
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spelling doaj-art-3c7d033ebefa470691ff4dfced7e3f2c2025-01-20T08:39:35ZengUniversity of JohannesburgCommunicare0259-00692957-79502024-12-0143210.36615/kcdkdg10Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinantsJacob Nyarko0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9851-2631University of Cape Coast After 202 years (1822‒2024) of its inception in the then Gold Coast, now Ghana, and witnessing an unprecedented upsurge in publication since 1992, the circulation of print media appears unevenly distributed between the centre (capital) and the peripheries. Since there are not enough studies that explore the circulation of print media under Ghana’s fourth republic to show its circulation patterns, this article analyses print distribution figures and views sourced from newspaper firms to examine the situation within the participatory communication and the political economy of the media frameworks. It uncovers that a few newspaper firms have regional offices but do not print in those locations. They function only as bulk distribution and administrative centres that gather news to feed their headquarters in the capital. Ghana’s print industry operates a centre-periphery production and distribution framework. Furthermore, the study unveils that four factors contribute to newspaper concentration in urban centres, namely ownership tendencies, revenue motives, skilled labour availability and seat of government, and urban media credibility. Thus, Ghana experiences wide rural‒urban print disparities which retard timely information sourcing, consensus building and participatory development communication. The findings from the study have implications for Africa. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2966communitydistribution patternsnewspaperparticipationrural urbanisation
spellingShingle Jacob Nyarko
Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
Communicare
community
distribution patterns
newspaper
participation
rural
urbanisation
title Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
title_full Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
title_fullStr Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
title_full_unstemmed Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
title_short Centre-periphery circulation patterns in Ghana’s print media landscape: exploring the underlying determinants
title_sort centre periphery circulation patterns in ghana s print media landscape exploring the underlying determinants
topic community
distribution patterns
newspaper
participation
rural
urbanisation
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2966
work_keys_str_mv AT jacobnyarko centreperipherycirculationpatternsinghanasprintmedialandscapeexploringtheunderlyingdeterminants