Women in Journalism Africa (WiJAfrica) has announced the full list of 25 most powerful female journalists in Nigeria.
WiJAfrica worked with a team of industry leaders and practitioners to rank the “25 Most Powerful” women in the media – particularly journalism.
WiJAfrica measured the most powerful woman journalist in four criteria including the size and effectiveness of influence in national affairs, influence in the media industry, experience and the arc of career and social and cultural influence.
Most of the women journalists on the list often shun the limelight and prefer to work behind the scenes.
Many of them will not be well-known to the public, but their understated approach is often the source of their power and longevity.
While WiJAfrica believes some of the names may be debated, it noted that this does not diminish their impact or the fact that they have clearly helped shape major issues in the polity.
See full list below;
Women in Journalism Africa is the annual gathering of women working in the field of journalism and the media across Africa.
The program is organised by WiJAfrica, supported by local and international partners with the aim of advancing conversations around the practice of journalism in Africa, promoting best practices and supporting innovation in the profession.
The first WiJ Conference held in 2014 at the Civic Centre in Lagos, with the CEO of Thomson Reuters Foundation, Monique Villa as the Keynote. Since then, notable speeches have been delivered at subsequent Conferences by Rhodes University’s Professor Anthea Garman, Courage in Journalism Winner, Chris Anyanwu and award-winning international journalist, Anna Cunningham in October 2019.
WiJAfrica has also seen extensive collaboration with the Nigerian Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ), the Nigerian Institute of Journalism (NIJ), UNESCO, the School of Media and Communication at the Pan-Atlantic University and the Mass Communications Department of the University of Lagos.
In 2015, WiJAfrica created a list of 50 Women Changing Journalism, which received wide attention. The 2015 Conference also saw leading global affairs journalist, Christiane Amanpour issue a statement of support for WiJ2015 and women journalists operating out of Africa.
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