“…Yet there is little, if any, research on the media's role since Burkina's 2015 coup (Ouédraogo, 2022;Heywood, 2022a, 2022b, Heywood et al, 2024 where, as in other African states, the daily lives of citizens, journalists and politicians have been shaped by the ongoing (political) insecurity. Initial work on Burkina Faso has addressed terrorist violence and media in the country and the effects of the security context on journalists' discourses and practices (Yaméogo, 2018a(Yaméogo, , 2018b; specific aspects of Burkina Faso's media (Bagare, 2019;Balima, 2001;Capitant, 2008); and Burkinabè radio. Yaméogo and Heywood (2022) have also contrasted the trust placed in radio with that of social media, considered by radio audiences to be sources of misinformation.…”