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Media and Globalization shows why the state matters to media and
telecommunications industries in a globalizing world: governments
control and regulate these industries in important ways and states
remain central arenas for policymaking and international
agreements. Using case studies drawn from around the world, this
book sheds light on the extent of state power in the face of
transnational pressures and explores policy, economics, and culture
as they factor into media globalization. Visit our website for
sample chapters
What roles can and should governments play in communication
policymaking? How are communication policies related to welfare
politics? With the rapid globalization of commerce and culture and
the increasing recognition of information as an economic resource,
the grounds for defending the welfare state have shifted.
Communication policy is now more widely understood as social
policy. Communication, Citizenship, and Social Policy examines
issues of communication technology, neoliberal economic policies,
public service media, media access, social movements and political
communication, the geography of communication, and global media
development and policy, among others, and shows how progressive
policymakers must use these bases to confront more directly the
debates on contemporary welfare theory and politics.
The book examines the reform of the communication sector in South
Africa as a detailed and extended case study in political
transformation - the transition from apartheid to democracy. The
reform of broadcasting, telecommunications, the state information
agency and the print press from apartheid-aligned apparatuses to
accountable democratic institutions took place via a complex
political process in which civil society activism, embodying a
post-social democratic ideal, largely won out over the powerful
forces of formal market capitalism and older models of state
control. In the cautious acceptance of the market, the civil
society organizations sought to use the dynamism of the market
while thwarting its inevitable inequities. Forged in the crucible
of a difficult transition to democracy, communication reform in
South Africa was navigated between the National Party's embrace of
the market and the African National Congress leadership's default
statist orientation.
The book examines the reform of the communications sector in South Africa as a detailed and extended case study in the transition from apartheid to democracy. The reform of broadcasting, telecommunications, the state information agency, and the print press from apartheid-aligned apparatuses to accountable democratic institutions took place via a complex political process in which civil society activism, embodying a post-social democratic ideal, largely won out over the powerful forces of formal market capitalism and older models of state control.
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