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GLOBALIZATION AND MEDIA POLICY
History, Culture, Politics
Paula Chakravartty and Katharine Sarikakis
Availability: Now In Stock
From Palgrave Macmillan
Pub date: Sep 2006
224 pages
Size 5 1/2 x 8 1/4
$80.00 - Hardcover (1-4039-7738-0)

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Description
This book takes a fresh look at media and communications policy and provides a comprehensive account of issues that are central to the study of the field. It moves beyond the "specifics" of regulation, by examining policy areas that have proved to be of common concern for societies across different socioeconomic realities. It also seeks to address profound gaps in the study of policy by demonstrating the centrality of historical, social, and political context in debates that may appear solely technical or economic.
 
Media Policy and Globalization covers the institutional changes in the communications policy arena by examining the changing role of the state, technology and the market, and the role of civil society. It discusses actual policy areas in broadcasting, telecommunications and the information society and examines the often-overlooked normative dimensions of communications policy.
 
Features
*Provides a cross-disciplinary critical perspective of the politics of communications policy-making in a global context
*Explores new issues in communications policy such as ethical concerns and the "internationality of policy"
*Useful for upper-level undergraduate students, graduate students, and scholars of communications and media studies, and international and global studies

Author Bio
Paula Chakravartty is Associate Professor of Communcation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Katharine Sarikakis is Senior Lecturer in Communications Policy, University of Leeds.

Praise for Globalization and Media Policy
"Globalization and Media Policy combines careful scholarship with a clear, accessible style that creatively integrates some of the best elements of critical theory. The book marks an important step in the development of media policy scholarship because it skillfully integrates political economics and cultural studies perspectives. It does an especially good job of placing research on states and gender theory into the center of policy analysis."--Vincent Mosco, Queen's University

Table of contents
PART I: POLICY CONTEXTS * Capitalism, Technology, Institutions, and the Study of Communications and Media Policy * Revisiting the History of Global Communication and Media Policy * PART II: POLICY DOMAINS * Governing the Central Nervous System of the Global Economy: Global Telecommunication Policy * Governing the Backbone of Cultures: Broadcasting Policies * PART III POLICY PARADIGMS * Policies for a New World or the Emperor’s New Clothes?: The Information Society * Civil Society and Social Justice: The Limits and Possibilities of Global Governance * Conclusions

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