This article undertakes an institutionalist analysis of broadcast media policy, analyzing sources of both stability and change over time. It draws attention to the distinctive features of broadcast licenses as a form of soft property and the significance of policy settlements as ways in which regulators in different countries have managed the relationship between private ownership and public interest. It traces the development of broadcast media policy in Australia from the 1950s to the present in this light, arguing that continuities in policy over time that have favored incumbent commercial interests have been the prevailing pattern of policy outcomes. The article concludes by raising issues about whether a social democratic approach to m...
The central argument of the Productivity Commission's final report on broadcasting is that Australia...
This study offers a theoretical explanation for political broadcasting policy in the United States i...
This article examines how the Howard government's 2006 media ownership rules affected the concentrat...
This article undertakes an institutionalist analysis of broadcast media policy, analyzing sources of...
Since broadcasting commenced in Australia in 1923, there have been very few changes to the regulator...
Utilizing published and unpublished sources and working with interviews of a number of participants ...
This article will identify and analyse significant developments in Australian media ownership, focus...
Karl Polanyi’s concept of a “double movement” has been used to describe the protectionist measures t...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 144-185.Introduction -- Chapter 1. New toys for old friends -...
This article considers the emergence of policies for localism within the Australian commercially net...
Political structures and the evolution of late capitalism in liberal Western democracies lend a comm...
Public service broadcasting and its commercial alternatives – most notably the corporate media syste...
It is almost universally accepted within advanced industrial democracies that concentration of media...
In the development of national television policy Australian governments have placed considerable imp...
This article examines how the Howard government’s 2006 media ownership rules affected the concentrat...
The central argument of the Productivity Commission's final report on broadcasting is that Australia...
This study offers a theoretical explanation for political broadcasting policy in the United States i...
This article examines how the Howard government's 2006 media ownership rules affected the concentrat...
This article undertakes an institutionalist analysis of broadcast media policy, analyzing sources of...
Since broadcasting commenced in Australia in 1923, there have been very few changes to the regulator...
Utilizing published and unpublished sources and working with interviews of a number of participants ...
This article will identify and analyse significant developments in Australian media ownership, focus...
Karl Polanyi’s concept of a “double movement” has been used to describe the protectionist measures t...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 144-185.Introduction -- Chapter 1. New toys for old friends -...
This article considers the emergence of policies for localism within the Australian commercially net...
Political structures and the evolution of late capitalism in liberal Western democracies lend a comm...
Public service broadcasting and its commercial alternatives – most notably the corporate media syste...
It is almost universally accepted within advanced industrial democracies that concentration of media...
In the development of national television policy Australian governments have placed considerable imp...
This article examines how the Howard government’s 2006 media ownership rules affected the concentrat...
The central argument of the Productivity Commission's final report on broadcasting is that Australia...
This study offers a theoretical explanation for political broadcasting policy in the United States i...
This article examines how the Howard government's 2006 media ownership rules affected the concentrat...