Abiodun Salawu is Professor of Journalism, Communication, and Media Studies and Director of the research entity, Indigenous Language Media in Africa (ILMA), at the North- West University, South Africa. He has taught and researched journalism, media and communication for close to three decades in Nigeria and South Africa. Prior to his academic career, he practised journalism in a number of print media organisations in Nigeria. He has, to his credit, well over a gross of scholarly publications in academic journals and books. He has also edited/ co- edited 13 books and authored 1. He is a regular presenter of papers at local and international conferences. He is a co- vice chair of the journalism section of the International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR) and a member of editorial/ advisory boards of a number of journals. He was involved in the founding of the International Association for Minority Language Media Research. He is rated by the NRF as an established researcher at the level of C1 (with international recognition), and he is a member of Codesria’s College of Senior Academic Mentors. He is a Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Letters and Member Royal Society of South Africa. Kehinde Oyesomi holds B.Sc. (2004), M.Sc. (2006) and Ph.D. (2013) degrees in mass communication. She also obtained a post-doctoral fellowship in communications from North-West University, South Africa, in 2018. Kehinde Oyesomi is Associate Professor of Communication and Media Studies and also the immediate past Head of Department, Mass Communication, Covenant University. She is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Covenant Journal of Communication. She has 17 years of working experience spanning journalism, corporate communications and teaching. Award winner during her undergraduate (Best student in Media Planning, overall best student in Public Relations and Advertising), NYSC days in Enugu State where she researched and wrote a book on HIV/AIDS that was circulated around secondary schools in the State, and she has won several research papers and grant awards both nationally and internationally. Recently, she was presented the Lecturer of the Year award for her role of supervisory responsibilities to the Covenant University student who won the gold medal at the Future Creative Leader Academy among other 20 institutions. Oyesomi has since traversed wider terrains in different but related fields of media and gender, development communication, journalism and public relations. Dr. Oyesomi is a member of the International Association for Minority Language Media Research (IAMLMR), African Council for Communication Education (ACCE), Association of Communication Scholars and Professionals of Nigeria (ACSPN), Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON), International Advertising Association (IAA), South African Communications Association (SACOMM), Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) among other local and international bodies and fora, and she is a reviewer and editorial board member for several local and international journals. She has published in several local and international high-impact journals. She also has book chapters and an edited book to her credit.
For continent in its post-colonial phase of development, Marketing Communication in African Languages, is a timely scholarly masterpiece as it addresses the extant challenge of dearth of scholarly attention to use of indigenous languages as vehicles of marketing communication on the African continent. The book epitomizes a renaissance of the use of indigenous languages in scholarship, commerce, entertainment and marketing of candidates during periodic democratic elections across the African continent. Rotimi Olatunji, Professor, Public Relations & Advertising, Faculty of Communication and Media Studies, Lagos State University, Ojo, Lagos, Nigeria. The landmark work done in this book offers a rich and diverse compilation of the key areas of marketing communications, where African languages have played prominent roles with successful outcomes. The pioneering effort of the authors deserves a commendable thumbs-up in their effort to showcase the beauty and the uncharted utility value in the use of African languages in marketing. Olugbenga C. Ayeni, Professor, Department of Business Administration, College of Business, Eastern Connecticut State University, USA.