At midnight, the Union Jack was lowered, and the Zambian flag was raised for the first time. Kenneth Kaunda became the first President, ushering in the motto:
: Led the United National Independence Party (UNIP) and became the first President. Independence Day : October 24, 1964.
Technological change: photocopying, desktop publishing, and PDF transition (1990s–2010s) The arrival of affordable photocopiers and later desktop publishing software democratized the production of pamphlets. Small NGOs, student groups, and activists could design and reproduce materials locally. With the growth of the internet and wider access to computers and email in the 2000s and 2010s, pamphlets began to transition into digital formats. PDFs became the de facto standard for distributing pamphlet-style documents online: they preserve layout, are easily attached to emails, and can be printed locally. Government ministries, NGOs, researchers, and activists produced PDF pamphlets for health education, electoral information, policy briefs, and historical summaries.
Political parties emerged to challenge colonial rule. The , led by the charismatic Kenneth Kaunda , became the voice of the people. Through civil disobedience and negotiations, the path to freedom was cleared.