2. Agenda
• Functions of Media?
• Links between Media and Development?
• What is “Media Imperialism” and why is it so
widely subscribed?
• Evidence for and against the MI thesis
• What are the alternative frameworks?
4. What are the functions of Media?
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Public Service?
To inform?
To educate?
To propagandize?
To entertain?
Social control?
Culture?
Media and the
Public Sphere
6. Paradigms of Development
Modernization
Dependences
– Western societies as a model
– emphasis on economic
growth
World systems perspective –
development defined in terms of
center and periphery
– Causes of underdevelopment
inherent in the countries
themselves
Underdevelopment ascribed to the
industrialized capitalist powers of the
West
– Focus onMass media
the nation-state
accorded a central
– Emphasis on individual
freedoms
role in the
development
– Vertical pattern of
process
communication – from the
elite to the people.
The mass media
reinforce the
Information gaps – underdevelopment
dominance of the
in the periphery is prerequisite to
development in the center
metropole over its
A country in the periphery must strive
satellites
for self-reliance and liberation from
the world system
Emphasis on social equality.
8. The McBride
Commission
Report (1985)
• international character of the media, their structures,
world-views and markets
• One way flow of media
• Globalization: concentration of media ownership,
monopolization of markets, and a decline in diversity
• Emergence of the information society
• Self-reliance and cultural identity
9. Media Imperialism
• Key assumptions?
• What are the links between globalization,
neoliberalism and media imperialism ?
• Why is this thesis so dominant in the media and
development literature over the last few decades?
• Is this popularity justified in terms of its explanatory
power and empirical support?
• What accounts for the weaning of the thesis'
popularity in recent years?
• What are the changing perspective on “local” versus
“Western” content?
10. “The 20th century has been characterized by three
developments of great political importance: the growth of
democracy, the growth of corporate power, and the growth of
corporate propaganda as a means of protecting corporate
power against democracy.”
Manufacturing Consent: the Political Economy of the Mass
Media, Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, 1988
11.
12.
13. • Media Concentration – Global Oligopology
– Transnational ownership
– Acquisition of local outlets
14. Why media concentration?
• Media Logic and the Free Market Capitalism
• Media ownership and funding sources
• Government policies and citizens roles
17. Key Claims
• Reinforcement of
Neoliberalism
– Consequences
– Consumerism, trade policies,
labour practices, inequality,
etc...
• Cultural homogenization
– Death of local culture
• Erosion of the Public Sphere
http://iletisim.ieu.edu.tr/flows/?p=749
18. Essentialism
• Mass media and reception
"Power is the ability
not just to tell the
story of another
• Unequal power
person, but to make
• “The West and the Rest” it the definitive story
• Power to “Representation” of that person".
– Agencies
– Consent
Chimamanda Adichie:
The danger of a single
story
http://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_adi
chie_the_danger_of_a_single_story.html
27. Everett Rogers
• “development as a widely participatory process
of social change in a society, intended to bring
about both social and material advancement
(including greater equality, freedom, and other
valued qualities) for the majority of the people
through their gaining greater control over their
environment” (Rogers, 1975)
Refer to assigned reading
28. Everett Rogers
• Diffusion of Innovations and Development
• field experiments and network analysis
• communication effects gaps and audience
participation
• Diffusion is uneven
• Local innovation and local problem solving
29. • “what is really new about communication
technology is not the technology per se as
much as the social technology of how the new
communication devices are organized and
used.” (1976: 34)
• Importance of interpersonal network in
knowledge transmission (not through “opinion
leaders”)
30. • 4 main elements that influence the spread of a
new idea:
– the innovation, communication channels, time, and a
social system.
• Diffusion is the process by which an innovation is
communicated through certain channels over
time among the members of a social system.
• Innovations progress through 5 stages:
knowledge, persuasion, decision, implementatio
n, and confirmation."
31. Rethinking Media Imperialism
• Is the power of the Western mass media
overstated?
• What are the roles of the state and local
organizations?
• What are the roles of the “audience”?
• What about local cultural contexts?