History of the Liberian Press (Part I)
February 22, 2010 Publisher and Chief Executive Officer KABS KANU Uncategorized 0
Related Posts
Uncategorized
Sierra Leone troops are not stranded in Chad, says Director of Peacekeeping Operations
Freetown, Sierra Leone, January 11, 2015 – The Director of Peacekeeping Operations in the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF) has refuted the social media story making the rounds […]
ACTION NEWS
Sierra Leone’s Anti-Corruption Commission makes dubious attempts to shield SLPP Government’s massive corruption
By Chernoh Alpha M Bah (11/01/2022) By now every Sierra Leonean knows that the arrest and detention of anyone on allegations of corruption have never been a secret affair in […]

Updated: February 22, 2010 – 2:09pm
Joe S. Kappia
The Nature of the Liberian Press
Press in the First Republic
There was some degree of press freedom under this provision until the administration of President Charles D.B. King when the National Legislature passed an anti-press freedom law on February 8, 1924 making it a criminal libel for:
publication was still guilty of libel.”
The Revolutionary Press
When the Daily Observer captured the market within the first three months of its existence, other papers that were weak began folding up because of a dramatic switch of readership to a better-looking and well-edited paper.
Joe S. Kappia is a former Features Editor for the Daily Observer. He is a former English teacher at Ganta Methodist School and Monrovia Central High School. He is a graduate of Teachers College at the University of Liberia. Kappia holds a Master of Science degree in mass communication (1989) and a Master of Arts degree in school administration and supervision (2008) from San Jose State University in California. He currently teaches English at Abraham Lincoln High School for San Jose Unified School District in California. This article is an excerpt from his master’s thesis “Developmental and Political News Coverage in the Liberian Press.”