Prof.

Fredrick

Ogenga

Kenya

Discipline
Political Science
Media and Technology Studies
Sociology
Communications
International Relations

Rongo University

Fredrick Ogenga is a Professor of Media and Security Studies and the Founding Director, Center for Media, Democracy, Peace & Security (CMDPS) both at Rongo University. He also serves as the CEO of The Peacemaker Corps Foundation Kenya (PCFK) and was a recipient of the 2016 Southern Voices Network for Peace building Scholarship at the Wilson Center, Washington DC. Ogenga was also a Swiss National Science Fund Visiting Research Fellow at Swisspeace, University of Basel, 2023, a UNDP Fellow, Digital Peacebuilding, 2023, a beneficiary of the 2014 and 2016 Africa Diaspora Fellowship (ADF), and an Africa Peacebuilding Network Fellow, 2014. Additionally, he was a recipient of a Peacetech Lab Award on piloting AI driven Violence Tracker in Kenya. Ogenga innovated Maskani or home, a social media digital peacebuilding intervention for addressing electoral polarization and has worked as a Visiting Scholar on Media and peacebuilding at the Institute for the Advancement of Social Sciences (IASS), and Africa Studies Center, both at Boston University, and at the Institute for Policy Research, at the University of Berth. He is a Letsema Visiting Fellow at the Institute for Pan-African Thought and Conversation, and Senior Non-resident Research Fellow, Institute for Global African Affairs, University of Johannesburg and West Indies. Ogenga is also a Senior Fellow, KHK Cultures of Research, RWTH Aachen University, Senior Research Associate, Swisspeace, and Associate Researcher Africa Studies Center, both at the University of Basel. Ogenga is a Member of the Scientific Panel on Information Integrity about Climate Science (IPIE), Vice Chair of the Peace and Development Research Association (PADRA), Co-chair of the East Africa Hub Joint Learning Initiative (JLI), and Co-chair of the Peace Journalism in East Africa Network (PJEAN). He is also a member of the Global Infotegrity Network, the International Panel for Exiting Violence (IPEV), and INTERPOL's Biological Incidence Triggers and Indicators.

On the web
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