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Exporting Press Freedom - Economic and Editorial Dilemmas in International Media Assistance (Hardcover)
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Exporting Press Freedom - Economic and Editorial Dilemmas in International Media Assistance (Hardcover)
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International media assistance is a small but important form of
international democracy-promotion aid. Media assistance boomed
after the 1989 transitions in Central Europe, but now flows to
virtually all regions of the world. Today the media assistance
industry is focused on the problem of sustainability: How are free
and independent public affairs media supposed to maintain their
editorial mission while facing hostile political systems or the
demands of the consumer marketplace? Many media in developing
countries have been or are grant-dependent. When grants are
exhausted or withdrawn, media that were funded to further
democratic consolidation typically wither and die. Some become mere
grant chasers. Others abandon public service to the demands of
market competition, or political patronage. As a result,
governmental and non-governmental grant makers now emphasize the
need for sustainability in considering grants in the media sector.
Many grant recipients have grown frustrated, sometimes bitter, and
have sought to take a much more active role in the way assistance
programs are put together. Just how is sustainability to be
achieved while also ensuring a public-service editorial mission?
"Exporting Press Freedom" examines the history and practice of
media assistance, and argues that the dilemma of media independence
and sustainability is best understood as an economic problem rather
than one of poor editorial standards or lack of will. It includes
profiles of news and public affairs media in developing and
democratizing countries, and also of two non-governmental
organizations that have pioneered the use of low-interest loans in
media assistance. These profiles exemplify strategic and
entrepreneurial approaches to developing and supporting public
service media. Such approaches may be of use not only in the
developing world, but in the consolidated Western democracies as
well, where concern has grown about poor journalistic performance
and its consequences for democratic governance. "Craig L. LaMay" is
a journalist, an assistant professor at Northwestern University's
Medill School of Journalism, an adjunct professor at Northwestern's
School of Law, and a faculty associate at Northwestern's Institute
for Policy Research.
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