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The Africa Editors Forum (TAEF) has conferred its Lifetime Service to Journalism Award on Professor Kwame Karikari, recognising decades of leadership, scholarship, and principled advocacy that have shaped media freedom in Ghana and across Africa.
The award was presented during the Africa Editors Congress in Nairobi, Kenya, where editors from across the continent gathered to advance a shared agenda for sustainable, independent journalism.
Prof. Karikari retired as Associate Professor and Director of the School of Communication Studies at the University of Ghana, Legon, after a distinguished academic career dedicated to strengthening journalism education and communications policy. A graduate of the City University of New York and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, he began his professional journey as a working newspaper journalist before transitioning into academia, where he mentored and influenced generations of media practitioners.
Since the 1980s, he has played a defining role in media governance and reform. He served as Director General of the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation and later as a member and Chairman of the Board of Graphic Communications Group Ltd., publishers of the national Daily Graphic and its allied titles. In the 1990s, he served on Ghana’s National Media Commission, the independent constitutional body mandated to safeguard press freedom and uphold media standards.
In the mid-1990s, Professor Karikari founded the Media Foundation for West Africa, now one of the region’s leading press freedom advocacy organisations. Through this platform and his broader continental engagements, he has championed legal reform, defended journalists under threat, and anchored the struggle for media independence in democratic accountability.
His expertise has informed policy processes at regional and global levels, including consultancies for UNESCO, WHO, ECOWAS, and the African Union. He also served on South Africa’s Press Freedom Commission in 2012. In January 2026, he concluded service as a member of Ghana’s Constitution Review Committee, contributing to proposals aimed at strengthening the country’s democratic framework.
In announcing the award, TAEF noted that Professor Karikari’s work reflects a rare blend of scholarship, institution-building, and public service. His career stands as a reminder that media freedom is not self-sustaining but requires vigilance, integrity, and sustained engagement.
For a lifetime of commitment to independent journalism and freedom of expression, the Africa Editors Forum proudly recognises Prof. Kwame Karikari with the TAEF Lifetime Service to Journalism Award.
About The African Editors Forum (TAEF)
The Africa Editors Forum (TAEF) is a continental network of editors, senior newsroom leaders, and media executives committed to strengthening independent journalism and advancing media freedom across Africa. TAEF works to promote ethical standards, defend press freedom, deepen professional solidarity, and support editorial innovation in response to the evolving political, economic, and technological landscape shaping the continent.
Through convenings such as the Africa Editors Congress and strategic partnerships with regional and global institutions, TAEF provides a platform for dialogue on journalism’s role in democracy, development, and African agency in emerging domains.
The Forum also champions fair compensation for journalism as a public good, newsroom resilience in the digital age, and collaborative responses to threats facing journalists and media organisations. TAEF serves as a collective voice for Africa’s editors, advancing a journalism culture rooted in independence, public interest, and lasting excellence.
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