Titre : | Media policy : convergence, concentration and commerce | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Denis McQuail, Editeur scientifique ; Karen Siune, Editeur scientifique | Editeur : | London : Sage Publication Ltd | Année de publication : | 1998 | Importance : | viii, 231 p. | Format : | 23,5 cm | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-7619-5939-7 | Prix : | 28,-€ | Note générale : | Edited for the Euromedia Research Group | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | DROIT EUROPE MEDIAS
| Tags : | régulation médias aspect économique convergence pluralisme concentration concurrence internet numérique aspect socio-culturel politique vidéo à la demande droit européen droit des médias | Index. décimale : | 340 Droit | Résumé : | Présentation par l'éditeur (4ème p. couverture) :
"The European media landscape is changing profoundly. In this wide-ranging and timely text, members of the Euromedia Research Group examine the ways in which national and supranational policy is adapting to these changes. The contributors of Media Policy consider:
+ The consequences for broadcasting systems of satellite and cable delivery
+ The fate of public broadcasting under deregulation
+ The changes currently affecting print media and newspaper
+ The implications of media changes for political and social cultural life
+ The significance of the Internet, the first true fruit of the telematic revolution in communication The main themes of media policy analysis today are convergence, concentration and commercialization, and abundance through digitalization. Although media policy has changed drastically in its concerns and forms, the contributors here argue that the need for an effective public communication policy in our "information society" is as pressing now as it ever was. Following up the success of the Euromedia Research Group's New Media Politics (1986), and the Dynamics of Media Politics (1992), this third volume in the series offers a timely review and analysis of developments in media and structure." | Note de contenu : | TABLE DES MATIERES :
Contributors
INTRODUCTION
1. Changing Media and Changing Society
PART I. Structural Changes
2. The European Newspaper Market
3. Does Public Broadcasting Have a Future?
4. Media Concentration and the Public Interest
PART. II. Technological Changes.
5. The Digital Future.
6. The Internet: A New Mass Medium?
7. Convergence: Legislative Dilemmas
PARt. III. Media and Sociocultural Change
8. Commercialization and Beyond
9. Politicization in Decline?
10. Media Use in the European Household
11. The Media in the Age of Digital Communication
PART IV. Policy Responses.
12. Debating National Policy
13. Media Concentration: Options for Policy
14. European Policy Initiatives
Conclusion:
15. Looking to the Future
Index |
Media policy : convergence, concentration and commerce [texte imprimé] / Denis McQuail, Editeur scientifique ; Karen Siune, Editeur scientifique . - London (EC1Y 1SP) : Sage Publication Ltd, 1998 . - viii, 231 p. ; 23,5 cm. ISBN : 978-0-7619-5939-7 : 28,-€ Edited for the Euromedia Research Group Langues : Anglais Catégories : | DROIT EUROPE MEDIAS
| Tags : | régulation médias aspect économique convergence pluralisme concentration concurrence internet numérique aspect socio-culturel politique vidéo à la demande droit européen droit des médias | Index. décimale : | 340 Droit | Résumé : | Présentation par l'éditeur (4ème p. couverture) :
"The European media landscape is changing profoundly. In this wide-ranging and timely text, members of the Euromedia Research Group examine the ways in which national and supranational policy is adapting to these changes. The contributors of Media Policy consider:
+ The consequences for broadcasting systems of satellite and cable delivery
+ The fate of public broadcasting under deregulation
+ The changes currently affecting print media and newspaper
+ The implications of media changes for political and social cultural life
+ The significance of the Internet, the first true fruit of the telematic revolution in communication The main themes of media policy analysis today are convergence, concentration and commercialization, and abundance through digitalization. Although media policy has changed drastically in its concerns and forms, the contributors here argue that the need for an effective public communication policy in our "information society" is as pressing now as it ever was. Following up the success of the Euromedia Research Group's New Media Politics (1986), and the Dynamics of Media Politics (1992), this third volume in the series offers a timely review and analysis of developments in media and structure." | Note de contenu : | TABLE DES MATIERES :
Contributors
INTRODUCTION
1. Changing Media and Changing Society
PART I. Structural Changes
2. The European Newspaper Market
3. Does Public Broadcasting Have a Future?
4. Media Concentration and the Public Interest
PART. II. Technological Changes.
5. The Digital Future.
6. The Internet: A New Mass Medium?
7. Convergence: Legislative Dilemmas
PARt. III. Media and Sociocultural Change
8. Commercialization and Beyond
9. Politicization in Decline?
10. Media Use in the European Household
11. The Media in the Age of Digital Communication
PART IV. Policy Responses.
12. Debating National Policy
13. Media Concentration: Options for Policy
14. European Policy Initiatives
Conclusion:
15. Looking to the Future
Index |
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