400 likes | 1.03k Views
Globalization. Process Whereby World Is Made into Single Place with Systemic DifferencesElements: Transborder Capital, Labor, News, Images, Information FlowsMain Engines: TNCs, TMOs. Media Globalization Aspects. Space-time CompressionChanging Working HabitsInformation Accessibility in Most Remote PlacesImpact on Local CulturesMedia Events Providing Common Experience and Uniting Globe.
E N D
1. International Communication Theory
Tomasz Pludowski, Ph.D.
Collegium Civitas, October 20, 2005
3. Media Globalization Aspects Space-time Compression
Changing Working Habits
Information Accessibility in Most Remote Places
Impact on Local Cultures
Media Events Providing Common Experience and Uniting Globe
4. Limitations of Global Village
5.
Media Distribution per 1,000 citizens
Knowledge Gap
6. Media Distribution per 1,000
7. Unbalanced Flow of Information
World’s News Agencies
Monopoly Control over Flow from and to Developing Countries
North-North
North-South
South-South
8. Structure of Global News Flow
9.
Elimination of Present Inbalances and Inequalities
Elimination of Negative Effects of Certain Monopolies & Exessive Concentrations
Removal of Obstacles to Balanced Dissemination of Information
10. New International Information Order, contd.
Plurality of Sources & Channels of Information
Freedom of Press & of Information
Freedom of Journalists
Developing Countries to Improve
Sincere Will of Developed Countries to Help
11. New International Information Order, contd.
Respect for Each People’s Cultural Identity and Right of Each Nation to Inform World about its Interests, Aspirations and Values
Respect of Right of All Peoples to Participate in International Exchanges of Information on Basis of Equality, Justice and Mutual Benefit
12. NWICO In the past, much of the IC debate focuse on the NWICO, which respresents:
An evolutionary process seeking a more just and equitable balance in the flow and content of information
A right to national sefl-determination of domestic communication policies
13. NWICO
3) At the international level, a two-way information flow reflecting more accurately the aspirations and activities of less developed countries (LDCs)
14. NWICO
Ultimate goal:
restructured system of media and telecommunications priorities in order for LDCs to obtain greater influence over their media, information, economic, cultural, and political systems
15. Conflict over NWICO LDCs postulate measures that clash with strongly held journalistic traditions and practices in the West:
Government control of the media
Limited reporter access to events
Journalistic codes
Licensing of reporters
Taxation of the broadcast spectrum
16. Balanced Flow of Information
Approved by UNESCO in the 1970s
Even that idea criticized as interference with free flow and free market mechanisms. Only an open and free flow of information is consistent with the goals of a truly free press
17. NWICO
Not merely a theoretical issue
Used to legitimize a governmental role in disseminating information in several states, notably in Africa (in Liberia journalists need permits to cover information, no permit ever given to use the Internet)
18. International News in Western Media
The average mass circulation newspaper in the West carries less international news than ten years ago (with the exception of time around 9/11)
19. Reasons for less international coverage
Costs ($250,000 per year to place an equip one)
Restrictions from censorship to jailing
High turnover of foreign correspondents
Trend toward ”parachute journalism”-flocks descending in scenes of conflict to trivialize and sensationalize complex issues
Lack of public concern, as reflected in the trend toward light, fluffy, and trendy journalism
20. Changes in International Media in 1980s and 1990s
21. American Media Background
Deregulation
Unprecedented Corporate Growth
-Mergers
-Concentration
-Conglomeration
-Monopoly
22. Media Research Most research looks at micro issues such as:
agenda-setting
Violence
Ownership
Or a specific medium such as:
Print
Television
23.
NWICO offers a macro approach,
so do the following theories:
24. Theories of International Communication
Electronic Colonialism Theory (ECT)
World-System Theory (WST)
Free Flow of Information
Modernization Theory
Dependency Theory
Structural Imperialism
25. Theories of International Communication, cntd Hegemony
Critical Theory
The Public Sphere
Cultural Studies perspectives
Theories of the Information Society
Discourses of Globalization
A Critical Political-economy of the 21st century
26. Electronic Colonialism Theory
Throughout history there have been few successful efforts at empire building:
Military Colonialism (B.C.-1,000 A.D.)
The expansion of the Roman empire throughout most of what is today Europe during the Greco-Roman period
27.
Christianity Colonialism (1,000-1,600)
Militant Christianity of the Crusades that sought to control territory from Europe to Middle East. Beginning 1095, 200 years of crusades led to the establishment of new European colonies in the ME. The territories were seized from Muslims as Western civilization became the dominant international force
28.
Mercantile Colonialism (1,600-1,950)
Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas became objects of conquest by European powers that sought markets, raw materials, and other goods unavailable at home in return sending colonial administrators, immigrants, a language, educational system, religion, philosophy, high culture, and a lifestyle that frequently were inappropriate for the invaded country. International status was a function of the number and location of one’s foreign colonies
29.
Electronic Colonialism (1950-Present)
In 1950s and 1960s rise of nationalism in developing countries and a shift to a service-based, information economy in the West set the stage for the fourth and current era of empire expansion
30. Electronic Colonialism Represents the dependent relationship of LDCs on the West established by the importation of communication hardware and foreign-produced software, along with engineers, technicians, and related information protocols, that establish a set of foreign norms, values, habits, values, and expectations that, to varying degrees, alter domestic cultures, habits, values, and the socialization process.
31. Electronic Colonialism Theory The concern is that this new foreign information will cause the displacement, rejection, alteration, or forgetting of native or indigenous customs, domestic messages, and cultural history. LDCs fear EC as much as MC. Whereas MC sought cheap labor, EC seeks minds. It is aimed at influencing attitudes, desires, beliefs, lifestyles, and consumer behavior.
32. Electronic Colonialism Theory As the citizens of LDCs are increasingly viewed through the prism of consumerism, control of their values and purchasing patterns becomes increasingly important to multinational firms. Tools: Western media messages, e.g. at its peak in mid-1990s, Baywatch was watched by more than 1 billion people a week in nearly 150 countries.
33. Electronic Colonialism Theory
EC relies on the long-term consequences of exposure to these media images and messages to extend the West’s market’s, power, and influence.
34. World-System Theory Provides the concepts, ideas, and language for structuring international communication. WST was proposed and developed by Immanuel Wallerstein.
WST proposes that global economic expansion takes place from a relatively small group of core zone nation-states out to two other zones of nations-states, these being in the semi-peripheral and peripheral zones
35. World-System Theory It is assumed that the zones exhibit unequal and uneven economic relations, with the core nations being the dominant and controlling economic entity.
Core nations
exert control and define the nature and extent of interactions with the other two zones
provide technology, software, capital, knowledge, finished goods, and services to the other zones which function as consumers and markets
36. World-System Theory Core
Capital-intensive, high-wage,high-technology production involving low labor exploitation and coercion
Periphery
Labor-intensive, low-wage, low-technology production involving high labor exploitation and coercion
Semi-periphery
Core-like actiivties, periphery-like activities
37. World-System Theory
38. Free Flow of Information The concept reflected Western, and specifically US, antipathy to state regulation and censorship of the media. It was part of the liberal, free market discourse designed in the post-WWII bi-polar world of free market capitalism and state socialism. As such it was part of the Cold War discourse. The FFI doctrine assisted the West in advertising and marketing their goods in foreign markets, in ensuring continuing influence of Western media on global markets, and in strengthening the West in its ideological battle with the Soviet Union. Also helped communicate, in subtle rather than direct ways, US government’s points of view to international audiences
39. Modernization Theory Complimentary to the doctrine of free flow in the post-war years was the view that international communication was the key to the process to the modernization and development of the so-called ‘Third World.’
Daniel Lerner, MIT, The Passing of Traditional Society (1958)- early 1950s research into audience exposure to radio in Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and Iran. Hypothesis: exposure to the media made traditional societies less bound by tradition and made them aspire to a new and modern way of life.