The author discusses the role of economic concentration in
limiting public access to information and reducing opportunities
for public discourse. Picard examines the government policies that
have contributed to the erosion of democratic participation and
have permitted the growth of large commercial press entities,
unobstructed by anti-trust provisions. He relates recent public
policy responses to this problem to democratic socialist ideology
and develops a social-democratic theory of the press which draws
upon ideas and policies found throughout the Western world. Picard
provides a democratic framework for understanding the changing
nature of media economics and state-press relations and offers
proposals for achieving both a democratically functioning press and
broader popular participation.
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