"NEW "State of Content Policy in Kenya
Read KICTAnet's latest policy brief "State of Content Policy' which aims to address the state of content policy in Kenya, policy issues, and their intersection with economic, political, and human rights. Authors of the policy brief begin by stating that: "Where the Kenyan Constitution guarantees freedom of expression and of media, it allows us to assume that content – its creation, production, and dissemination – is fundamentally a human right? Besides gains made over time, "Our society has experienced great change but little transformation." *WHY?* "The content policy has leaned towards regulation." Here is a link to the brief https://bit.ly/3ieugoe We welcome your feedback. You can also read more of KICTAnet's informative discourses here https://www.kictanet.or.ke/downloads/ *Kind Regards,* *David Indeje *
Listers below is the link to download the "State of Content Policy' brief https://www.kictanet.or.ke/?mdocs-file=41664 *Kind Regards,* *David Indeje * +254 (0) 711 385 945 | +254 (0) 734 024 856 On Tue, 30 Jun 2020 at 09:45, David Indeje <davidindeje@gmail.com> wrote:
Read KICTAnet's latest policy brief "State of Content Policy' which aims to address the state of content policy in Kenya, policy issues, and their intersection with economic, political, and human rights.
Authors of the policy brief begin by stating that:
"Where the Kenyan Constitution guarantees freedom of expression and of media, it allows us to assume that content – its creation, production, and dissemination – is fundamentally a human right?
Besides gains made over time, "Our society has experienced great change but little transformation."
*WHY?*
"The content policy has leaned towards regulation." Here is a link to the brief https://bit.ly/3ieugoe
We welcome your feedback.
You can also read more of KICTAnet's informative discourses here https://www.kictanet.or.ke/downloads/
*Kind Regards,*
*David Indeje *
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David Indeje