Just as momentum is building around finding ways for news operations to charge for their information on the Web, one key thinker has said this is a waste of time. Chris Anderson, the respected editor of Wired, has published Free, which argues that - like the music - industry we have to accept that all information is fighting to be free on the internet, and one has to find other ways to make it pay.
Continue Reading July 20th, 2009
South African media companies are producing better-than-expected results, despite the downturn in advertising.
Continue Reading July 2nd, 2009
When Heather Brooke was a journalism student in the US, she applied to see her congressman’s expenses. She received all the receipts within three days. Back in England, and shortly after that country’s Freedom of Information Act came into force, she became something of a freelance campaigner, sending off information requests to dozens of state institutions.
Continue Reading June 11th, 2009
Journalism as we know it today – the active collection, verification and processing of news for audiences by dedicated reporters - evolved early in the 18th century in London and a little later in the US. There was news before that, and there were newspapers before that, certainly, and these papers had correspondents around the country and the world, but this was the first time that individuals were hired for the distinct purpose of following news events and writing them up for their newspapers.
Continue Reading June 8th, 2009
Ferial Haffajee surprised most people when she announced - rather precipitously - that she was abandoning the Mail & Guardian editorship for City Press. It was a big shift for her, and an even bigger one for City Press.
Continue Reading April 29th, 2009
Newspapers have been in trouble for some time. But the current economic downturn, and the drop in advertising expenditure that came with it, have speeded things up dramatically.
Continue Reading April 29th, 2009
Hierdie is ’n pleidooi aan Jacob Zuma: Gryp die oomblik van jou verkiesing en jou verheffing tot president aan om jou verhouding met die media op ’n nuwe grondslag te plaas. Jy kan nie, jy kan eenvoudig nié jou presi?dentskap begin deur redakteurs, koerante, skrywers en spotprentkunstenaars te dagvaar nie.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
This is a plea to Jacob Zuma: seize the moment of the election and your ascendancy to the presidency to put your relationship with the media on a new footing. You cannot, you simply cannot, begin your presidency suing editors, newspapers, writers and cartoonists.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
Sitting on judging panels for journalism awards gives one valuable insight into the best of South African reporting. The Taco Kuiper Award, which gives out a whopping R200 000 for “a distinguished example of investigative journalism” will be handed out this week, and that has meant I have been poring through piles of material of some of the year’s most important stories.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
Latest news is that Mail & Guardian staff have been warned that they will be told in two weeks who is going to be retrenched and who can stay. Attempts are being made to prevent this, but things look tough.
Continue Reading March 25th, 2009
We gave money from our Taco Kuiper Fund at Wits U to the Daily Dispatch to investigate the spate of killings of Somalis in their region. The result is a great story, a powerful investigation, and imaginative and rich use of multimedia on their website. Have a look at Daily Dispatch.
Continue Reading March 14th, 2009
I was struck by how dignified and appropriate was the President’s response to the collapse of the story of his pregnant, young girlfriend. He chose his words carefully, and he chose them well. “I will drop a line to the Press Ombudsman,” he said.
Continue Reading February 10th, 2009
The Sowetan journalists are upset with me, perplexed at how I could have criticised their coverage of the President (”He sleeps alone, like a monk”) but defended the Star’s expose of the three women competing for his affections. Was I inconsistent?
Continue Reading February 4th, 2009
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Anton Harber: Media
Professor Anton Harber directs the Journalism and Media Studies Programme at Wits University. He is former editor of the Mail & Guardian.
Full bio
Daily newspaper sales, South Africa
(Ave sales Jul-Dec)
1960 - 681 053 (Population 17,3m)
1970 - 723 566 (22m)
1980 - 803 229 (27,5m)
1990 - 1 214 396 (35,2m)
2000 - 1 117 886 (44m)
2006 - 1 600 000 (47,3m)
2011 - 1 310 000 (49m)
(Sources: ABC and nationmaster.com)
“It was pure political theatre. The excited room was filled with government officials, government consultants, quasi-government agencies, politicians and pupils from government schools. As if on cue, the room rang with applause as one education victory after another was claimed. This was, after all, the annual drama in which the minister of basic education appears on stage to announce the Grade 12 National Senior Certificate (NSC) results …” - Educationist Jonathan Jansen, one of the few with the credibility to look critically at this “celebratory orgy of mediocrity”.
“The (Incwala) ceremony is cloaked in secrecy and marks the (Swaziland) king’s return to public life after a period of withdrawal and spiritual contemplation. Among its highlights is a symbolic demonstration by the king of his power and dominance in a process involving his penetration of a black bull … But last year’s selected bull, according to a recent account from a whistle-blowing Incwala initiate, objected strongly, and threw off Africa’s last absolute monarch.” - Some surprises in this (un-bylined) account of Swaziland politics in Southern African Report
“When the Great Zucchini arrived that Saturday morning, Don had no idea who he was. Frankly, he didn’t look like a great anything. He looked like a house painter, Don thought, with some justification. He wears no costume. He was in painter’s pants, a coffee-stained shirt and a two-day growth of beard. He toted his beat-up props in beat-up steamer trunks, with ripped faux leather and broken hinges hanging askew.” - A classic of magazine profiling, by Gene Weingarten of the Washington Post.
Diepsloot (Jonathan Ball, 2011)
Diesploot: Of Frogs and Fractals, a public lecture at the University of Johannesburg, 4 August 2011
Troublemakers - The Best of South Africa’s Investigative Journalism (Jacana, 2101), edited by Anton Harber and Margaret Renn
Introduction - The Troublemakers: An account of the rise of a new wave of investigative journalism in South Africa.

What is Left Unsaid: Reporting the South African HIV Epidemic, edited by Kristin Palitza, Natalie Ridgard, Helen Struthers and Anton Harber (Fanele, 2010)
Reflections on Journalism in the Transition to Democracy - Ethics & International Affairs 18, no. 3 (2004).
Journalism in the Age of the Market
- Harold Wolpe Memorial Lecture, Centre for Civil Society, University of KZN, Aug 2002
The Untimely Death of SA’s Finest Daily - Sunday Times, May 2005
“Two Newspapers, Two Nations? The Media and the Xenophobic Violence” from Go Home or Die Here, edited by Shireen Hassim Tawana Kupe and Eric Worby (WUP, 2008)
Remarks at Goedgedacht Forum, October 2008
The rise of social network journalism - From The 2009 Flux Trend Review (Macmillan, 2008)
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