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BMA To Survey The Industry On The Challenges Of Regulating Media In A Digital-First Era

April 8, 2026
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As Africa’s media ecosystem rapidly shifts beyond traditional broadcasting into a complex, digital-first environment, a new industry-wide survey is set to interrogate one of the sector’s most pressing challenges: how to effectively regulate media in an era defined by borderless content, platform dominance, and citizen-driven publishing.

Launched by Broadcast Media Africa, the survey titled “Regulating Africa’s Broadcasting and Media in the Digital Ecosystem – Status in Africa” places the spotlight firmly on the widening gap between legacy regulatory frameworks and the realities of modern media consumption and production.

Across the continent, regulators are grappling with systems originally designed for linear, analogue broadcasting, now stretched to accommodate streaming platforms, social media networks, and a fast-growing creator economy. In this new environment—where every smartphone user can act as a publisher—questions around jurisdiction, accountability, and enforcement have become increasingly complex.

The survey aims to unpack how African countries are responding to these structural shifts. It will assess whether regulatory definitions have evolved to include digital platforms and on-demand services, and examine how oversight mechanisms are being adapted to address content that is no longer confined by national borders or traditional licensing regimes.

A key area of focus is accountability in a decentralised media landscape. With non-traditional players now commanding significant audiences, the survey will explore whether effective systems exist to manage public complaints, misinformation, and harmful content originating outside conventional broadcast structures.

The study will also delve into the growing influence of global technology platforms and their relationship with national regulatory bodies, particularly in areas such as local content visibility, compliance, and revenue flows. At the same time, it will examine how regulators are approaching the rise of artificial intelligence and automated content, which are reshaping editorial processes and media integrity.

By engaging regulators, broadcasters, digital publishers, content creators, civil society, and academia, the survey is expected to provide a 360-degree view of the regulatory landscape. The goal is not only to diagnose current gaps but to identify pathways toward more coherent, adaptive, and future-ready frameworks.

The results will inform a comprehensive report offering a continent-wide view of regulatory readiness, along with practical recommendations for policy alignment and a proposed co-regulation model that balances innovation with public-interest safeguards.

As Africa’s media sector continues to evolve at pace, the survey underscores a critical reality: regulation must evolve just as quickly—not to constrain growth, but to ensure that the digital ecosystem remains fair, accountable, and sustainable.

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