Low Patronage of Development Radio Programmes in Rural Nigeria: How to Get Beyond the Rhetoric of Participation

ABSTRACT

Although the concept of participatory development communication is decades old,

many years of autocratic military rule has robbed African scholars and media

practitioners of the context needed to explore the full participatory potentials of the

media. With eight years of democracy and heavy development burdens, Nigeria is

ripe for assessment with regard to the role of its media in engendering participatory

development. From a small-scale study, this paper discovers that while radio stations

expend tremendous time and energy producing and airing development programmes,

the listeners in the selected rural area mostly avoid such programmes

and spend their time and batteries on a strange genre of programmes tagged ‘bizarreoccurrence’

programmes. This implies that the listeners are not properly taken into

account, let alone involved in the production of these development programmes.

This is clearly contrary to the tenets of participatory development communication

and democracy. The paper suggests ways by which radio can become a more

participatory medium with its mission, focus and products consistent with the

democratic dispensation.