Media Sector Development Working Group

This working group considers the efforts of actors around the globe to shape the laws and institutions that determine how media systems change and develop. These efforts encompass a myriad of activities—policy advocacy, training and capacity building for journalists, the formation of professional associations, the reform of public service media, among others—and constitute a field of practice and international cooperation known as “media sector development.” Equitable access to information, good governance, democracy, civic rights, cultural rights, communication power, and poverty eradication are all cited among the justifications for media sector development efforts, with implications for how this work is supported and carried out. 

The Working Group has two objectives. The first is to offer a space to debate key and emerging issues facing the  sector’s development. The Working Group aims to probe, unpack, and reshape the ideas underpinning media development. At the same time, this working group will have an explicit focus on building a bridge between concepts and action, drawing from interdisciplinary perspectives and co-created knowledge to inform and support advocacy strategies, approaches to international cooperation, policy reforms, and other interventions by local, national, and international actors. The working group provides an opportunity to harness the of IAMCR network for academic-practitioner collaborations that will help support and inspire evidence, research, and data that can be leveraged to support media development. The Media Sector Development Working Group aims to promote a bottom-up approach to media development that recognizes and supports the agency of citizens and civil society to shape broadcast, print, and digital media at multiple levels. 

Co-Chair: Nicholas Nick Benequista <nbenequista [at] gmail.com>
Co-Chair: Susan Abbott <susanabbott1 [at] gmail.com>
Vice-Chair: Winston Mano <W.Mano [at] westminster.ac.uk>
Vice-Chair: Jairo Lugo-Ocando <jairo.lugo-ocando [at] northwestern.edu>


See the list of all current members of the Media Sector Development Working Group. For more information about a given member, go to https://iamcr.org/members-contact (accessible only to IAMCR members).


To join the Media Sector Development Working Group, login to your account and select My Sections and Working Groups from the menu. A number of IAMCR sections and working groups send notices and other information exclusively to their members. IAMCR members can join up to three sections or working groups.

To receive our newsletter and be in communication with other members of the Media Sector Development Working group, please sign up for the Media Development Research Network list-serv. 

IAMCR's Media Sector Development Working Group invites proposals for IAMCR 2023, to be held in Lyon, France, from 9 to 13 July (Lyon23) with an Online Conference Papers (OCP23) component from 26 June to 5 July. The deadline for submission is 9 February 2023, at 23.59 UTC.
IAMCR's Media Sector Development Working Group invites the submission of proposals for papers and panels for IAMCR 2022, which will be held online from 11 to 15 July 2022. The conference will also have a national hub at Tsinghua University in Beijing. The deadline for submission is 9 February 2021, at 23.59 UTC.
IAMCR's Media Sector Development Working Group invites the submission of proposals for single papers and multi-paper sessions (the online conference equivalent of a panel in a face to face conference) for IAMCR 2021, which will be held online from 11 to 15 July, with a regional hub in Nairobi, Kenya. The deadline for submission is 9 February 2021, at 23.59 UTC.
The IAMCR Media Sector Development Working Group will hold online elections in 2020 for one Vice-chair position.
IAMCR's Media Sector Development Working Group invites the submission of abstracts of papers and proposals for panels for the 2020 conference of the Association, which will be held from 12 to 16 July, 2020 at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China.
This working group considers the efforts of actors around the globe to shape the laws and institutions that determine how media systems change and develop.