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Powers in Media Policy

The Challenge of the European Parliament

by Katharine Sarikakis (Author)
©2004 Monographs 214 Pages

Summary

Contrary to widespread rhetoric of deregulation, the media are objects of increased global policy. Generators of cultural spheres, within which social consensus is formed, the media are shaped by national and supranational agencies of questionable legitimacy. Policy delineates the form and content of global communications impinging on cultures, discourses and consciousness; yet, citizen representation in processes of policy-making remains fragmentary.
In this insightful study, the author examines the role of the European Parliament, as the only international organisation directly accountable to and elected by citizens, in the formation of media policy. This critical account of supranational representation identifies the structural and ideological dynamics of powers in European media policy. Through detailed examination of major policies, the author demonstrates the conditions under which supranational representation can offer a resisting force to unaccountable global powers, and the ways in which it can contribute to system transformation and defend communication spaces.

Details

Pages
214
Publication Year
2004
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039101467
Language
English
Keywords
Media Policy European Parliament policy-making Governance public service broadcasting media ownership concentration Broadcasting market
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2004. 214 pp., 11 tables

Biographical notes

Katharine Sarikakis (Author)

The Author: Katharine Sarikakis (Ph.D.) is Senior Lecturer in International Communications and Media Policy at Coventry University. Her research interests are in the area of globalisation and in particular, international political economic aspects and the role of institutions in media policy, technology and gender.

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Title: Powers in Media Policy