West Africa: 768 Delegates Apply to Attend CJID West Africa Journalism Innovation Conference


WAJIC will convene media and other stakeholders to reassess its approaches to content production, distribution, and financial sustainability.

The Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID) has received 768 applications from journalists, academics, and technological experts to attend its inaugural, first of its kind West African Journalism Innovation Conference (WAJIC). #WAJIC’23, which holds under the theme Accountability Journalism: Nurturing Innovation for a Sustainable Future, aims to explore the crucial intersection between accountability journalism and innovation in Africa.

Artificial intelligence, particularly the recent breakthroughs in large language models (LLMs), has brought about a revolutionary transformation in our world. Its impact on jobs and democracies can be both positive and negative, depending on the steps adopted in guiding its development in the immediate future. In West Africa, the media plays a crucial role in addressing these concerns, yet it faces its own challenges in this rapidly changing landscape. To ensure its survival and contribute to democratic outcomes, WAJIC will convene media and other stakeholders to reassess its approaches to content production, distribution, and financial sustainability.

Walter Conkrite once stated that “Journalism is what we need to make democracy work.” Journalism around the world however battles hydra-headed issues like declining public confidence in the media, a lack of newsroom independence, subpar media and new literacy, information disorder, and inadequate budget which are leading it to decline in the 21st century.