After enjoying a virtual monopoly of broadcasting media in the country for nearly 40 years, the Malaysian government decided to allow a private commercial TV station to operate in the country in 1984. This was a bold step and an exception to the rule in the control of broadcasting in the Asian Third . World region, where broadcasting is not only made subservient to governments, but also made to serve their specific interests
Paper Session 4348: Policy Intervention Attempts: Studies in Failure and Potential - Communication L...
Under the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (the Cable Act), municipal regulation of rates for...
This article compares the television industry in Indonesia during the reign of the Old Order, the Ne...
This paper aims to delve into the history of broadcasting in Malaysia since the 1980s. We will go do...
With two state-owned television stations, four commercial free-to-air television stations and about ...
Television came relatively late to Australia, but by 1950 the overriding issue of whether to allow ...
The advent of transnational satellite television in the early 1990s caught Asian governments unaware...
The emergence of television in Malaysia has created new market opportunity for local production comp...
Border residents in Meranti Regency still love Malaysian free to air television broadcasts. The br...
Competition policy became important in Malaysia following the regulatory reforms that accompanied th...
Malaysian government officials would study Rupert Murdoch's global television networks before decidi...
Broadcasting is a contemporary channel of cultural exchange for many countries around the world. Thi...
This thesis investigates the implications of Media Prima Berhad’s (MPB) corporate growth. MPB is the...
Private television channels in Bangladesh have become a part of ruling parties’ politics. Without ru...
Host: Centre for Financial Regulation & Economic Development (CFRED), Chinese University of Hong Kon...
Paper Session 4348: Policy Intervention Attempts: Studies in Failure and Potential - Communication L...
Under the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (the Cable Act), municipal regulation of rates for...
This article compares the television industry in Indonesia during the reign of the Old Order, the Ne...
This paper aims to delve into the history of broadcasting in Malaysia since the 1980s. We will go do...
With two state-owned television stations, four commercial free-to-air television stations and about ...
Television came relatively late to Australia, but by 1950 the overriding issue of whether to allow ...
The advent of transnational satellite television in the early 1990s caught Asian governments unaware...
The emergence of television in Malaysia has created new market opportunity for local production comp...
Border residents in Meranti Regency still love Malaysian free to air television broadcasts. The br...
Competition policy became important in Malaysia following the regulatory reforms that accompanied th...
Malaysian government officials would study Rupert Murdoch's global television networks before decidi...
Broadcasting is a contemporary channel of cultural exchange for many countries around the world. Thi...
This thesis investigates the implications of Media Prima Berhad’s (MPB) corporate growth. MPB is the...
Private television channels in Bangladesh have become a part of ruling parties’ politics. Without ru...
Host: Centre for Financial Regulation & Economic Development (CFRED), Chinese University of Hong Kon...
Paper Session 4348: Policy Intervention Attempts: Studies in Failure and Potential - Communication L...
Under the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (the Cable Act), municipal regulation of rates for...
This article compares the television industry in Indonesia during the reign of the Old Order, the Ne...