Abstract:
Sustainable development as a concept over decades has cast its lens on economic and ecological sustainability with little attention given to the social aspect of it, particularly the role of social development in the building of stable, resilient and ultimately economically sustainable communities. Such a realization is hinged on social cohesion which equivocally undergirds the formation of stable communities. Kenya grapples with ethno-political animosities which have
destabilized the country socially and economically in the past and still a looming threat. Taking the form of a theoretical discussion, this paper demystifies ethnicity as a concept and shines the spotlight on the relationship between social cohesion and the mass media. Four major types of mass media influence are looked at to this effect. They are: the media’s role in defining the
political atmosphere in which public discussions take place, the mass media’s role in defining the nature of debates within it, the mass media’s role in influencing the strategy and behaviour of political and opinion leaders in ethnic tense situations and finally their role in raising and lowering public legitimacy of the a fore leaders. I argue that despite being limited by a set of
news values, the Kenyan media can promote social cohesion by presenting the audience with a balanced and no-partisan media coverage. Individual agency is however stressed as it is only through genuine interest of the ‘other’ that social cohesion and ultimately social sustainable development can be reached.