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Media and Globalisation MEVIT 3220 & MEVIT4220. Globalisation and National Responses: Policy and Regulation Dumisani Moyo. Main Texts for today’s lecture. Van Binsbergen and van Dijk Tomasellis & Heuva, Horwitz: Resistance, negotiation Sonwalker: Murdochisation
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Media and Globalisation MEVIT 3220 & MEVIT4220 Globalisation and National Responses: Policy and Regulation Dumisani Moyo
Main Texts for today’s lecture • Van Binsbergen and van Dijk • Tomasellis & Heuva, Horwitz: Resistance, negotiation • Sonwalker: Murdochisation • Miller: Global Hollywood and division of labour
National Responses: Policy & Regulation • Intro: • Weak states, failed states, the nation-state project? • Africa in the global debate • Relevance to global economy - Castelles • Source of raw materials, little processing • Victimhood • Colonisation, plunder and dispossession • National TV, foreign images • Global media situation: M-Net, CFI, BBC, VOA, etc
Cultural imperialism debate • Cultural imperialism and resistance: the 60s (particularly in Latim America) • Expansion of American TNCs to S. America in 60s and 70s gave rise to this debate; along with American mass culture, mass products • Cultural imperialism debate & NWICO debates • Walter Rodney: How Europe Underdeveloped Africa • Belgian Amand Mattelart, Hebert Schiller (USA), and Canadian Dallas Smythe • Influenced by Gramsci, the Frankfurt School
Critique & decline of cultural imperialism • Central to cultural imperialism thesis was the aspect of victimhood … Cultural domination N/S, atomised society at mercy of cultural industry • But by the late 70s, questions were being raised about the claimed international influence of mass culture, about passive receivers of mass mediated messages • Katz and Liebes (1984) Once Upon a Time in Dallas: different readings, sociao-cultural frames in decoding - diversity rather than homogeneous
Critique and Decline: Cultural imperialism… • Challenge also came from ‘active audience’ theories - audience resistance • John Fiske (1986) - polysemic reading of texts • Stuart Hall (1973) - preferred meaning (Encoding and Decoding …) • Oppositional meanings, e.g. portrayal of women
Critique and Decline: Cultural imperialism… • So, is cultual imperialism dead?? • Not quite • Term expanded to mean not just American domination, but also TNCs from Europe, Asis, etc. though USA still dominant • Oliver Boyd Barrett’s work on news flows between North and South still influential • Cultural imperialism and literary theory • Still many forms of resistance to cultural imperialism - active and passive • Ngugi wa Thiong’o - there has always been resistance
Neoliberalism and the Developing World • Dying down of resistance discourse (cultural imperialism and NWICO) and ascendance of neo-liberalism in the 80s • IMF/WB, trade regimes such as GATTs, WTO and the drive for privatisation, deregulation opening up of markets • Role of consultants, global civil society in spreading the new ideas • Reforms in telecomms
The wider context … The Four waves of marketisation • 1. Policy changes in the USA from the 1980s onwards • 2. Changes in other industrialised countries (Western Europe, Canada, Australia, etc). See, e.g, Humphreys, 1996; Collins and Murroni, 1996; Levy 1999 etc. • 3. Changes in transitional and mixed societies (see, e.g. Curran and Park, 2000; Price et al. 2002) • 4. Convergence, and new laws that seek to reflect these changes (Hesmondhalgh, 2002)
African responses … • Van Binsbergen and van Dijk: African Agency in Appropriation of Global Culture • Responses of African societies to various forms of globalisation: reinterpretation of Christian faith and domestication of certain practices • Creative appropriation of global culture - the new ICTs and the traditional mass media • Reflexivity • Gewald and the hijacking of CNN - linked to Sonwalker’s article on Murdochization
African responses: some cases … • But how did African countries respond in terms of media policies? • South Africa: Negotiated liberalisation (Horwitz, 2001; Heuva and Tomasellis, 2004) • Zambia: Reluctant liberalisation • Zimbabwe: Musical chairs?
Media Policy and Regulation Supranational Ragulatory Frameworks • SADC Protocol on Transport and Communications • TRASA Telecoms Regulators Association of Southern Africa • COMESA – towards harmonisation of ICT policy • African Charter on Broadcasting (MISA, USAID, OSISA) • Declaration on Human and People’s Rights
South African response • Robert Horwitz’ central argument is that, • “Though globalisation creates pressures, opportunities, and constraints, communications reforms are shaped largely by domestic actors through domestic political institutions” (Horwitz, 2001). • Domestic political environment shapes media policy
South African Response • Brief historical background: SA - First colonised by the Dutch, then the British - Under Apartheid grip for since the late 1940s - The media served white interests, and used as a tool of repression • Broadcasting in particular was used as a tool for divide and rule (Bantustan radio) • Public service broadcasting and John Reith
South African response • Converging interests on the eve of independence in 1993: • The NP feared the prospect of having broadcasting in the hands of a black majority government in the post-independence era • Nelson Mandela’s ANC on the other hand feared the idea of going into elections with the SABC in the control of the NP • The NP therefore wanted to move with haste to privatise the SABC, which would guarantee continued white ownership
South African Responses … • Broadcasting and nation-building: 11 official languages • Three tier broadcasting system comprising of public service, commercial and community broadcasters - all mandated with a public service role
South Africa and the region … • Some recent developments: • SA has moved way ahead of even most European countries in terms of setting up a converged regulator (ICASA) (Collins, 2004). • Influence of South African model in the Southern African region
Zambia • Reluctant despite donor pressure • Licensing Christian community broadcasters • Selective implementation of new laws (the ZNBC Act and the IBA Act of 2002 • Monopoly has been broken, but state broadcaster remains dominant • No independent regulator appointed despite new law
Zimbabwe • Change without change: playing musical chairs • Extreme resistance: 75% local content • Ban on foreign ownership in broadcasting • Ban on foreign reporters operating within • More repressive laws • No independent regulation • State monopoly broadcasting persists
Some implications … • The state still matters • Policy still shaped at the national level despite weakness of the African state • Global pressure for communications reform have produced varied instead of homogeneous responses • The poor can creatively appropriate, negotiate and even domesticate global culture • African film, URTNA, SABA, Nollywood • Cultural imperialism? • Unbalanced flows sill persist …