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The price of plurality. Choice, diversity and broadcasting institutions in the digital age / Tim Gardam
Titre : The price of plurality. Choice, diversity and broadcasting institutions in the digital age Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Tim Gardam, Editeur scientifique ; David A.L. Levy, Editeur scientifique Editeur : Oxford [United Kingdom] : Reuters Institute for the study of journalism Année de publication : 2008 Importance : 222p. Format : 29,5 cm Note générale : Disponible pour téléchargement sur le site de l'Institut Reuters Langues : Français Catégories : MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL: TELEVISION
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUETags : Europe Grande-Bretagne Etats-Unis télévision protection des mineurs pluralisme démocratie service public information numérique internet audiovisuel programmation diversité culturelle audience concurrence aspect économique aspect socio-culturel Index. décimale : 006.6 Numérisation Résumé : Résumé proposé par le site de l'Institut Reuters :
"Plurality has been at the heart of the UK’s Public Service Broadcasting ecology. Exceptionally high levels of innovation and investment have been delivered by a wide range of different public service broadcasters. But to what extent will that still be sustainable in a fully digital and on-demand world?
As Ofcom undertakes its Review of Public Service Broadcasting and the next Communications Act approaches, policy-makers must decide how to recast and update the UK’s broadcasting system and how much priority to give to sustaining plurality of public service provision. This book brings together a wide variety of perspectives on this critical issue, from producers and broadcasters, academic experts, politicians and policy-makers".
Note de contenu : CONTENTS
Preface (Ed. Richards)
The structure and purpose of this book (T. Gardam and D. Levy)
1. The Puropose of Plurality (T. Gardam)
2. Does plurality need protecting in the New media Age ?
- 2.1. Plurality and the broadcasting value chain - relevance and risks ? (R. Foster)
- 2.2. Lessons from the first communications act (D. Putnam)
- 2.3. Plurality preserved : rethinking the case for public intervention in a new media market
- 2.4. Public purpose versus pluralism ? (P. Hodgson)
- 2.5. Plurality : what do we want from it ? (S. Terrington and M. Ashworth)
3. Can the current system be reformed ? Views from inside the broadcasters'tent
- 3.1. The curious outsider (P. Dale)
- 3.2. The BBC, viewed from inside and out (S. Shah)
- 3.3. The remaining incentives for commercial public service broadcasting (P. Ibbotson)
- 3.4. Plurality : making room for competition (J. Lighting)
4. Can the current system be reformed ? Views from outside the broadcasters' Tent
- 4.1. Is plurality really the issue ? (P. Bazalgette)
- 4.2. How to fund public service content in the digital age
- 4.3. Plurality and the sustainability of tyhe british production industry (S. Morrison)
- 4.4. The fertile fallacy : new opportunities for public service content (A. Liley)
5. Diversity and democracy : public service news in the online age
- 5.1. Media diversity and democracy (J. Curran)
- 5.2. Impartiality - Why it must stay (R. Tait)
- 5.3. Impartiality - The case for change (T. Suter)
- 5.4. A diversity of understanding : the increasing importance of major public service broadcasting institutions (J. Seaton)
6. Public service content in an age of participation : the future of citizenship, local news and local engagement
- 6.1. Citizens and consumers : Government online versus information and informed citizenship (H. Margetts)
- 6.2. Bringing the news to where you are (R. Laughton)
- 6.3. The changing nature of the local market
- 6.4. It's Literacy, Jim, but not as we know it : mass literacy in the digital age (A. Singer)
7. Plurality and democracy in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
- 7.1. Broadcasting policy and the Scottish question (Ph. Schlesinger)
- 7.2. Plural Communities (G. Talfan Davies)
- 7.3. Plurality, diversity and localism in Northern ireland (N. Emerson)
8. Children's Programming
- 8.1. On the future of children's television - a matter of crisis ? (S. Livingstone)
9. Plurality in the global market : perspectives from Europe and the United States
- 9.1. Plurality pf public service provision : a European dimension ( P. Iosifidis)
- 9.2. Public television and pluralistic ideals (E. P. Goodman and M. E. Price)
- 9.3. The economics of plurality : Europe and the USA compared (R. Picard)
10. The way ahead : towards a new communications act (D. Levy)
Notes on contributorsEn ligne : http://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/uploads/media/The_Price_of_Plurality_0 [...] The price of plurality. Choice, diversity and broadcasting institutions in the digital age [document électronique] / Tim Gardam, Editeur scientifique ; David A.L. Levy, Editeur scientifique . - Oxford (Dept of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford, OX26PS, United Kingdom) : Reuters Institute for the study of journalism, 2008 . - 222p. ; 29,5 cm.
Disponible pour téléchargement sur le site de l'Institut Reuters
Langues : Français
Catégories : MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL: TELEVISION
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUETags : Europe Grande-Bretagne Etats-Unis télévision protection des mineurs pluralisme démocratie service public information numérique internet audiovisuel programmation diversité culturelle audience concurrence aspect économique aspect socio-culturel Index. décimale : 006.6 Numérisation Résumé : Résumé proposé par le site de l'Institut Reuters :
"Plurality has been at the heart of the UK’s Public Service Broadcasting ecology. Exceptionally high levels of innovation and investment have been delivered by a wide range of different public service broadcasters. But to what extent will that still be sustainable in a fully digital and on-demand world?
As Ofcom undertakes its Review of Public Service Broadcasting and the next Communications Act approaches, policy-makers must decide how to recast and update the UK’s broadcasting system and how much priority to give to sustaining plurality of public service provision. This book brings together a wide variety of perspectives on this critical issue, from producers and broadcasters, academic experts, politicians and policy-makers".
Note de contenu : CONTENTS
Preface (Ed. Richards)
The structure and purpose of this book (T. Gardam and D. Levy)
1. The Puropose of Plurality (T. Gardam)
2. Does plurality need protecting in the New media Age ?
- 2.1. Plurality and the broadcasting value chain - relevance and risks ? (R. Foster)
- 2.2. Lessons from the first communications act (D. Putnam)
- 2.3. Plurality preserved : rethinking the case for public intervention in a new media market
- 2.4. Public purpose versus pluralism ? (P. Hodgson)
- 2.5. Plurality : what do we want from it ? (S. Terrington and M. Ashworth)
3. Can the current system be reformed ? Views from inside the broadcasters'tent
- 3.1. The curious outsider (P. Dale)
- 3.2. The BBC, viewed from inside and out (S. Shah)
- 3.3. The remaining incentives for commercial public service broadcasting (P. Ibbotson)
- 3.4. Plurality : making room for competition (J. Lighting)
4. Can the current system be reformed ? Views from outside the broadcasters' Tent
- 4.1. Is plurality really the issue ? (P. Bazalgette)
- 4.2. How to fund public service content in the digital age
- 4.3. Plurality and the sustainability of tyhe british production industry (S. Morrison)
- 4.4. The fertile fallacy : new opportunities for public service content (A. Liley)
5. Diversity and democracy : public service news in the online age
- 5.1. Media diversity and democracy (J. Curran)
- 5.2. Impartiality - Why it must stay (R. Tait)
- 5.3. Impartiality - The case for change (T. Suter)
- 5.4. A diversity of understanding : the increasing importance of major public service broadcasting institutions (J. Seaton)
6. Public service content in an age of participation : the future of citizenship, local news and local engagement
- 6.1. Citizens and consumers : Government online versus information and informed citizenship (H. Margetts)
- 6.2. Bringing the news to where you are (R. Laughton)
- 6.3. The changing nature of the local market
- 6.4. It's Literacy, Jim, but not as we know it : mass literacy in the digital age (A. Singer)
7. Plurality and democracy in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
- 7.1. Broadcasting policy and the Scottish question (Ph. Schlesinger)
- 7.2. Plural Communities (G. Talfan Davies)
- 7.3. Plurality, diversity and localism in Northern ireland (N. Emerson)
8. Children's Programming
- 8.1. On the future of children's television - a matter of crisis ? (S. Livingstone)
9. Plurality in the global market : perspectives from Europe and the United States
- 9.1. Plurality pf public service provision : a European dimension ( P. Iosifidis)
- 9.2. Public television and pluralistic ideals (E. P. Goodman and M. E. Price)
- 9.3. The economics of plurality : Europe and the USA compared (R. Picard)
10. The way ahead : towards a new communications act (D. Levy)
Notes on contributorsEn ligne : http://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/uploads/media/The_Price_of_Plurality_0 [...] Réservation
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