Who Owns the Media? Global Trends and Local Resistances
SummaryText
From the Publisher
The ownership of the media and issues related to the governance of global media institutions are of immense public significance. Not only are the cultural industries a major source of contemporary power — economic, political, social — they are also the primary definers of consciousness in most parts of the contemporary world.
Media ownership patterns and permutations today are a direct consequence of the globalisation of neo-liberal economics. While there are some regional variations in the ownership "mix" the trend, from South Africa to Argentina and India to East and Central Europe, is towards privatisation, deregulation, retreat from the state's public media responsibilities and the contraction of space for non-commercial, community-based media efforts.
This collection of critical writings on media ownership from different parts of the world by leading scholars, including Robert McChesney, Dan Schiller, Cees Hamelink, Sean O'Siochru, Zhao Yuezhi and others, offers a richly textured, contextual reading of the political economy of contemporary media ownership. Issues addressed include convergence, global media governance, intellectual property, telecommunications regulation and deregulation, censorship, the role of the state, with a strong accent on the need for transparency, accountability and media diversity.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Editors' Preface
Part 1: Theory and Policies
The ownership of the media and issues related to the governance of global media institutions are of immense public significance. Not only are the cultural industries a major source of contemporary power — economic, political, social — they are also the primary definers of consciousness in most parts of the contemporary world.
Media ownership patterns and permutations today are a direct consequence of the globalisation of neo-liberal economics. While there are some regional variations in the ownership "mix" the trend, from South Africa to Argentina and India to East and Central Europe, is towards privatisation, deregulation, retreat from the state's public media responsibilities and the contraction of space for non-commercial, community-based media efforts.
This collection of critical writings on media ownership from different parts of the world by leading scholars, including Robert McChesney, Dan Schiller, Cees Hamelink, Sean O'Siochru, Zhao Yuezhi and others, offers a richly textured, contextual reading of the political economy of contemporary media ownership. Issues addressed include convergence, global media governance, intellectual property, telecommunications regulation and deregulation, censorship, the role of the state, with a strong accent on the need for transparency, accountability and media diversity.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Editors' Preface
Part 1: Theory and Policies
- The political economy of international communications by Robert W. McChesney
- Global institutions and the democratization of media by Seán Ó Siochrú
- Intellectual property rights by Cees J. Hamelink
- Privatisation: The costs of media democratization in East and Central Europe
- The politics of the media in the English-speaking Caribbean
- The political economy of media in Southern Africa, 1990-2001
- Media ownership and control in Africa in the age of globalization
- Media and neoliberalism in Latin America
- Communications and the crisis: From Neoliberal to authoritarian development?
- The state, the market, and media control in China
- Media ownership and communication rights in India
- The political economy of media ownership in Nigeria
- Ownership, control and the Malaysian media
- The whole world is watching: Online surveillance of social movement organizations
- Agendas for research and strategies for intervention
Number of Pages
316
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