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2 - Revisiting the history of global communication and media policy

from Part One - Policy contexts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Paula Chakravartty
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Katharine Sarikakis
Affiliation:
University of Vienna
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Summary

This chapter provides a broad overview of the shifts in the field of global communication policy as the nation-state's regulatory power itself is reconfigured from the post-World War Two era to the current era of global integration. In historicizing the shift in global governance we highlight the various factors which led to the rise and ultimate decline of the Fordist mode of regulation. In the first section, we consider the continuities as well as the ruptures of the shift by focusing on the specific experience of the postcolonial state. We contend that these states, unlike their welfare state and state-socialist counterparts in the First and Second Worlds, were already integrated into an uneven international system of governance, well before the pressures of globalization. The post-World War Two project of ‘national development’ and modernization of Third World economies and cultures were very much at the heart of the most significant struggles in the field of global communication policy and provide a particularly interesting vantage point to consider the ideals and failures of the state's role in representing public interest. In the second section, we account for the turn toward the neoliberal information economy focusing on the transformation of the state in shaping national policy. We trace the evolution of North-South relations in this ‘flexible’ post-Fordist regulatory era by laying out the material and symbolic dimensions behind the ‘reregulation’ of global communication policy.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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