The 1980s witnessed a rapid growth of communication technology
and an immense expansion of new media around the globe. The
development of new information and communication technologies has
emphasized again the importance of economic, social, political, and
cultural institutions associated with the definitions of new
technologies. Many of the traditional conceptions of the relation
of the media to democracy were predicated upon a certain perception
of communication technology and the major contemporary debates
related to democratization have to do, again, with the deployment
of technologies. How do all these developments affect society? How
is the communications explosion related to democracy? What are the
implications for the social functions of communications, people's
activities, consciousness and values, media ownership and control,
both nationally and internationally? These are some of the
questions discussed in this volume.
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