ICFJ Knight Roundup: Azerbaijani News Gets a 'Push' From New Mobile App

By: Alyssa Mesich | 02/26/2016

Mobile app gives a "push" to news, techy tools for elections, and more from the Knight Fellows in this week’s roundup.

New mobile app gives Azerbaijani news a "push"

This week, the Azerbaijani television station Meydan TV launched its first mobile news app for Android and iPhone in collaboration with ICFJ Knight Fellow Chris Guess, who built the app. Available in Azerbaijani, Russian and English, Meydan TV can now push stories directly to its audiences on their mobile devices. As Guess explained in a recent IJNet post, "...mobile apps are expensive, time-intensive to develop and difficult to maintain. There’s no easy way for small organizations to create an app without hiring two developers for US$130k/year." The Push app gives news organizations that don’t have the time, money or resources to build their own app an affordable solution. Guess will soon roll out the app with other news organizations in the region, and has made the app’s code available on GitHub for anyone who would like access.

Election tech tools bolster democracy across Africa

New technologies have increased the transparency of recent elections across Africa and led to increases in voter registration. ICFJ Knight Fellow Stephen Abbott Pugh discusses such new technologies in his post "Can democracy spread at the push of a button?" on The Guardian’s Global Development site. Among the tools he highlights is Code for Africa’s GotToVote, an open source toolkit that has helped citizens in several African countries, including Kenya, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Malawi, confirm their voter registration and find the nearest registration center.

#AfricaInvestigates Ebola in Sierra Leone

ICFJ Knight Fellow Chris Roper discusses how corruption in public health institutions worsened the Ebola epidemic in West Africa in the most recent episode of the Africa Investigates podcast. Journalist Silas Gbandia, who is featured in this episode, highlights cases of public health workers who rose above the corruption that plagues Sierra Leone's health care infrastructure. The Africa Investigates podcast is available on iTunes.

Chicas Poderosas returns to Miami for three-day mediathon

 

Former ICFJ Knight Fellow Mariana Santos, and her Chicas Poderosas network, are organizing a three-day mediathon April 14-16 in Miami, in collaboration with Florida International University, Fusion and The Lab Miami. Sessions will include virtual reality, Snapchat storytelling and salary negotiation. Founded in 2013 by Santos during her ICFJ Knight Fellowship to bring more women into news technology, Chicas Poderosas now boasts more than 1,700 members, with chapters in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela.

A new tool allows citizens to share their views on the South African parliament’s budget

Code for South Africa partnered with the International Budget Partnership to launch Vote for the Budget, a new online tool that gives South Africans the opportunity to provide feedback to Parliament before the budget becomes the law.

This post is also published on IJNet, which is produced by ICFJ.

Main image CC-licensed by Flickr via Micheal J.

News Category

Latest News

The Journalists Behind Afghan Fact Share How They Counter Disinformation

At the end of 2022, an Afghan journalist sent his colleagues an IJNet Persian article on fact-checking and verification. The piece came with a recommendation: that they should launch a website focused on fact-checking in Afghanistan.

Leveraging AI to Boost Efficiency and Innovation in the News

The rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) has generated excitement and fear alike within the news industry, prompting many to ponder what lies in store for journalism’s future.

If approached smartly and leveraged strategically, AI offers journalists and their outlets promising potential to boost efficiency and innovation.

Guidance for Building Trust with the Communities You Serve

One way journalists and news organizations can strengthen audience trust is to focus on reaching people who may not actively read or watch the news, suggested Lynn Walsh, assistant director at Trusting News, during an ICFJ Empowering the Truth Global Summit session. To do so effectively, it's important for journalists to “think like a news consumer,” she said.