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Media policy for MA and PDMM
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We’ll address What is policy & what’s its purpose?
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1. INTERNAL, EXTERNAL
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Typical internal policy areas Editorial issues: –Independence, plagiarism, ethics. Business issues: –Smoking, leave.
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Typical internal policy gaps Editorial issues: –Covering poverty, environment, human rights. Business issues: –training, BEE
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Typical external policy Broadcasting: – sectors – local content – elections – psb Convergence gap. Qtn: how external is external? (Bridges, Panos, Reader 1).
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Some key external issues Adapted from Steyn: Deregulation or re-regulation Liberalisation Corporatisation/commercialisation Privatisation Concentration laws
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More external issues in media policy Public broadcaster Freedom of expression Diversity Social/cultural issues: language, nationhood Convergence
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Policy overflow & overlap Crede and Mansell (p76), WEF: sectoral policies – + health, education, etc. media policy technology policy telecoms policy industrial policy ICT policy Berger: one policy or one philosophy? James: vertical, horizontal, macro …
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2. DEFINITIONS
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What is policy, what’s it for? How does policy differ from regulation, codes, laws? Key assumptions & distinctions: –a framework, or a plan, or a law? – to guide, or direct, or govern? – informal or semiformal, or formal? – based on values/principles, norms or standards? Is yr take weak or medium or strong?
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Think points Your definition sheds light on the question: What’s the point of policy? It locates policy in the sequence of: –Vision (& values, assumptions/givens) – Mission (and broad strategy) – POLICY (making choices in context) – Law – Regulations & codes – Practice
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2. ANALYSIS BY QUESTIONS
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Classic journalists’ qtns applied to policy What is it? Who is involved in policy? Where are they? When are they involved? How are they involved? Why policy? So what?
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What is it about? Role of state in comms? Media, broadcast, telecoms? Standards – technical, cultural Carriers, integration, connections Control and ownerships Content and language Access: complaints, services Degree of independence
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What is it in character? Formal, or informal? Legal or not? Effective? Measurable? Reviewable?
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Who is involved in policy? Who makes it? – govt, regulators, judges, consultants, owners, international organisations, directors, editors, managers, staff, civil soc, global professionals, men... (see Lichem) Who is affected? – media, investors, sports groups, telecoms companies, citizens …
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Where is it? Govt, presidency, parliament, party caucusses, hearings & enquiries, regulator, civil service, courts, media, golf courses, London, NY, Geneva. Is it in the public sphere or not?
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When policy? When made? – law-making, crises, social and technological changes, political pressures, court cases, global fashions, conferences … – political will and capacity – retrospective vs forward looking When effected? – when power & bureaucracy active
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How policy? Ad hoc, or planned process? Role of values, vision, philosophy Interests: articulated, aggregated Role of info and research, Participation or not? Accountability & public opinion. Budget and costs factor How it is supposed to work: –“policy as hypothesis”
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Why policy? Ans: framing power – to avoid or pre-empt problems. (Note: problems for who? How ID’d?) – to enable and empower for solutions – to prioritise & allocate resources – structure & promote economic life – balance conflicting interests – citizenship, education, nationalism.
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So what about policy? Ans: to engineer – knowledge-gap: media-tool assumptions – media-scape, but “leakage”. – relates to law, regulation, practice. – implementation gap: issues of budgets, resources, capacity. – visionary stretch vs realistic trim? – policy overload problems.
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Golding: Policy focus INDUSTRY STRUCTURE MEDIA CONTENTS
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Golding: Policy ethos interventionist liberal INDUSTRY STRUCTURE MEDIA CONTENTS
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Golding: Policy systems AuthoritarianFree market + strong state RegulatoryLibertarian interventionist liberal INDUSTRY STRUCTURE MEDIA CONTENTS
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Golding: Policy systems AuthoritarianFree market + strong state RegulatoryLibertarian interventionist liberal INDUSTRY STRUCTURE MEDIA CONTENTS Note: label
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Summing up Internal – external Definitions Proper place of policy What, who, where, when, how, why and so-what? Policy on content, on industry structure Interventionist vs liberal ethos, systems Reading: Berger, Steyn.
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