Negotiating Democracy addresses issues that have defined the challenges and consequences of media transformation faced by new and emerging democracies. These issues include the dismantling of national broadcasting systems, the promotion of private independent and pluralistic media, the clash between liberal democratic and authoritarian political traditions, negotiations about the appropriate broadcast language, and the potential for free press and for freedom of speech. The contributors use examples from countries such as Cambodia, Bulgaria, Iran, Nigeria, and Taiwan to not only provide detailed analysis of regional and/or nation-specific cases of media, but also to identify transnational patterns that help deepen the understanding of the media’s role in globalization.
Cuprins
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Media and Democracy in the Age of Globalization
Patrick D.Murphy
PART I. REGIONAL TRENDS IN MEDIA AND DEMOCRACY
1. Media Independence and Pluralism in Africa: Opportunities and Challenges of Democratization and Liberalization
Isaac A. Blankson
2. Vestiges of Authoritarianism: Monopoly Broadcasting in Central America
Rick Rockwell
3. Emerging Media Transformations in the New Europe: Past and Future Challenges
Noemi Marin and Laura Lengel
PART II. STATE CONTROL, LIBERALIZATION, AND DEMOCRATIC REFORM
4. An Awakening in Cambodia: From Failed State to a Media-Rich Society
Drew O. Mc Daniel
5. First Democracy in Chinese History: Media’s Role in the Democratization of Taiwan
Kuldip R. Rampal
6. Nigeria: Equivocating while Opening the Broadcast Liberalization Gates
Chuka Onwumechili
7. Media, the State, and the Prodemocracy Movement in Iran
Mehdi Semati
8. Transformations and Development of the Korean Broadcasting Media
Doobo Shim and Dal Yong Jin
PART III. TELEVISION, RADIO, GLOBALIZATION, AND DEMOCRACY
9. Reality Television, Politics, and Democratization in the Arab World
Marwan M. Kraidy
10. Democracy Sponsored by NAFTA?
Mexican Television in the Free Trade Era
Kenton T. Wilkinson
11. First Green Is Always Gold: An Examination of the First Private National Channel in Bulgaria
Elza Ibroscheva and Maria Raicheva-Stover
12. Globalization and the Privatization of Radio in Greece: Influences, Issues and Consequences
Judy Rene Sims
Notes on the Editors and Contributors
Index
Despre autor
At Southern Illinois University Edwardsville,
Isaac A. Blankson is Associate Professor of Communication and Public Relations and
Patrick D. Murphy is Professor of Mass Communications. Murphy is the coeditor (with Marwan M. Kraidy) of
Global Media Studies: Ethnographic Perspectives.