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Global Media. Communication Around The World. Media Ideals Around The World. Four Theories of the Press (1956): written by Fred S. Siebert, Theodore Peterson, and Wilbur Schramm four major forms of international press: authoritarian libertarian Soviet/communist
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Global Media Communication Around The World
Media Ideals Around The World Four Theories of the Press (1956): • written by Fred S. Siebert, Theodore Peterson, and Wilbur Schramm • four major forms of international press: • authoritarian • libertarian • Soviet/communist • social responsibility
Last Rights: Revisiting Four Theories of the Press: • 1995 book written by John Nerone • update of earlier four theories • argued four theories were not a timeless set of categories • saw them as a critique set within a particular time period A fifth theory? • development theory
Authoritarian theory • oldest theory of the press • role of the press is to be a servant of the government • control of the press is carried out by: • giving permits to only certain printers • prosecuting anyone who violates standards • totalitarian governments (example in the1990s: Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic)
Communist Theory • press is run by the government to serve the government’s own needs • only one valid political and social philosophy • proposes the following principles: • The media are an instrument of the government and the Communist Party. • The media should be closely tied to other sources of government power. • The media’s main purpose is to act as a tool for government propaganda.
Libertarian Theory • Press belongs to the people and serves as an independent observer of the government. • It follows the basic ideals of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. • It is based on the following principles: • People want to know the truth and be guided by it. • The only way to arrive at the truth is for ideas to be freely and openly discussed. • Different people will have different opinions, and everyone must be allowed to develop their own. • The most rational ideas will be the most accepted • The functions of the press are to inform, entertain, and advertise.
Social Responsibility Theory • while the press may be free from interference by the government, it can still be controlled by corporate interests • press obliged to serve several social functions: • provide the news and information needed to make the political system work • give the public the information needed for self-governance • serve as an overseer of the government • serve the economic function of bringing together buyers and sellers through advertising • provide entertainment • be profitable enough to avoid outside pressures.
Norms for the press in the twenty-first century • development theory: • addresses the special needs of emerging nations • governments may feel that they need to restrict freedom of the press in order to promote industry, national identity, and partnerships with neighboring nations
Going Global—Media Standards Around The World • Alan Ward’s five dimensions of media rating: • control • finance • programming goals • target audience • feedback mechanism
Canada, Western Europe, and Britain • Canada • free press patterned in part on the United States • U.S. media tends to overshadow Canadian • “Canadian content” regulations: • Canadian radio must be at least 35 percent domestic programming
Western Europe and Britain • broadcasting was dominated by state-run monopolies up until the 1980s. • public service and cultural preservation priorities • Britain and BBC: • operates under a public service model • audience members pay the cost of the programming (equipment licensing fees)
Internet not as pervasive • increase in privately owned television stations • newspapers tend to take an obvious political view point • newspaper readership worldwide highest in Europe • facing declines
Central and Latin America • broadcasting dominated by North American, Mexican, and Brazilian programming • fewer language barriers than other regions • newspaper circulation has been growing • 1,000 papers, 100 million readership
Islamic Countries and the Middle East • straddle the fence between social responsibility and authoritarian media control • controls on journalists and content • Al Hayat and Al-Jazeera • satellite and Internet and “small media” allowing bypass of control • Professor Kai Hafez’s three types of press in the Arab world: • mobilized • loyalist • diverse
The importance of “small” media • fax machines, photocopy machines, video cameras, computers, and the Internet • provide for a range of voices • Internet allows for wider expression • size and availability make control difficult
Television in the Islamic World • heavy government control • varied availability • Saudi Arabian network (1960s) • little known about Saudi viewer habits • 1995 survey—63 percent had access to satellite programming
Al-Jazeera • broadcast via satellite from Qatar since 1997 • only 10 percent of all Arabs with satellite TV never watch it • committed to presenting an Arab view of the world • founded by Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani • started after failed Arabic-language BBC project
Dangers to Journalists: • In 2006 worldwide 55 journalists were killed • 32 of them were in Iraq (4 combat-related, 28 murdered) • ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff injured • hostage-taking increasing • fear of reprisals discouraging journalistic coverage in danger spots
Africa • prime example of development media theory • early media covered white settlers only • newspapers found in large cities • circulation limited by poverty and illiteracy • radio is the most important medium • Television and Internet limited • no major newspapers are published in African languages • more languages spoken than any other continent
South Africa • most radio handled by South African Broadcasting Corporation • committee of lawyers and media professionals regulate the broadcast industry • television broadcasts in seven different languages • source of inspiration for Western pop music: • township jive • artists have recorded with Western artists
Russia and the former Soviet republics • under communism, no ideal of an independent press • control continues even after 1991 fall of Soviet Union • most media owned by private, pro-government business people • Moscow—twenty daily and weekly newspapers • zakazukha—selling articles to highest bidder • some papers supports the boss’s political agenda • television is the most important medium • few can afford newspapers
Asia • mix of old and new media philosophies • India • 40 percent of India’s households have television sets • 40 percent read newspapers • 120 million of 220 million households have a radio • newspapers are big industry • All India Radio (AIR) dominant radio source
China • role of the media is to promote public policies • all media are controlled by the government • Kenneth Petress on Chinese media: • “Propaganda is not a dirty word in China; it is a respected public service profession.”
Japan • American policy helped shape Japanese media after World War II • NHK is Japan’s public broadcasting corporation • Balance between commercial and public broadcasting • manga, or comic books, are the most popular magazines: • account for 40 percent of all books and magazines • growing in popularity in the United States
Marshall McLuhan’s Global Village: • electronic media help people live and interact globally • Ken Auletta: • perhaps not just one single wired global village • perhaps hundreds or thousands of global villages • W. Russell Neuman: • just because we have access, people may choose to ignore it