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Academics globally pledge to mentor PRAcademics globally have undertaken to work closer together with public relations practitioners in striving towards making PR more relevant in Africa through the establishment of an Intercontinental PR Academic Network to share ideas, knowledge and skills. The aim is to assist in problem-solving and addressing challenges in PR globally, delegates were informed at the Federation of African PR Associations (FAPRA) conference in Johannesburg yesterday, Tuesday 23 May. Prof Ronel Rensburg, head of Communications Management at the University of Pretoria, gave delegates an update from the Global Alliance Academic Forum, which is evaluating world public relations education and accreditation standards to ensure consistency of excellence in public relations training. The Fapra conference, held for the first time in South Africa this week, saw over 150 public relations practitioners from all over Africa interacting with their South African counterparts in a conference themed 'Managing Africa's Reputation'. Emphasis was also given to initiatives underway by the world body of PR associations, the Global Alliance, which will hold its 2007 conference in South Africa - the World Public Relations Festival - in Cape Town in May next year. Globally, organisations like Fapra and South Africa's own Institute of Public Relations (PRISA), which played host to Fapra this week, have until December 2006 to sign a global code of ethics of public relations - which all their members will then have to abide by - as well as fall in line with proposed global PR training standards as the debate continues into 2007. Fostering excellence in AfricaAcademics undertook to work closely with PR practitioners to foster excellence in Africa for Africa. A handbook, PR in Africa, is already in progress as an academic work. The issues presented by Rensburg to delegates at the Fapra 2006 conference will be tabled at the Global Alliance for 2007. Explained Rensburg: "Academics are very similar across the globe, but in Africa we have an added social responsibility: we need to shape, teach, research, implement and maintain our discipline in our growing, changing, learning and developing democracies." Rensburg said that in 2002, PR academics across the globe were given the opportunity to scrutinise the discipline at the ninth International Public Relations Research Symposium in Bled, Slovenia. For the first time, African scholars were invited on board. Academics from around the world had to report on the status of public relations in their respective countries/continents using the following framework:
A book about global PR appeared as a result of this conference and PR in Africa as an academic field - albeit with humble beginnings - became a player on the global stage, said Rensburg. Value-adding agentsIssues that came out of the discussion in the Academic Forum subsequently, included:
A question that has come up again and again during deliberations, said Rensburg, was what public relations and public relations practitioners should do to distinguish them as value-adding agents. The processShe said while academics would be addressing some issues for years, the process had begun to make public relations more relevant in Africa:
Clear deliverables The Academic Forum has decided on the following more immediate tangible deliverables, Rensburg continued:
"In the real world of work, the proof of the pudding lies in the eating. In the world of PR the satisfaction lies in the taste that the pudding produces. It is the creation and maintenance of business relationships, a job well done, a project successfully completed, a conflict managed effectively, a crisis solved satisfactorily, a leaderss reputation saved - that will be remembered by our stakeholders. In the end PR is what PR does," Rensburg concluded. About Louise MarslandLouise Burgers (previously Marsland) is Founder/Content Director: SOURCE Content Marketing Agency. Louise is a Writer, Publisher, Editor, Content Strategist, Content/Media Trainer. She has written about consumer trends, brands, branding, media, marketing and the advertising communications industry in SA and across Africa, for over 20 years, notably, as previous Africa Editor: Bizcommunity.com; Editor: Bizcommunity Media/Marketing SA; Editor-in-Chief: AdVantage magazine; Editor: Marketing Mix magazine; Editor: Progressive Retailing magazine; Editor: BusinessBrief magazine; Editor: FMCG Files newsletter. Web: www.sourceagency.co.za. View my profile and articles... |