This article examines the evaluation and regulation of public service broadcasting’s (PSB’s) contribution to home-grown children’s content, a key marker of difference with commercial rivals. UK experience forms the core of the analysis, but throughout we connect findings to experiences in other European countries. We concentrate on PSB’s interventions in TV, but consider this within the wider scope of multiplatform and online activities that occupy increasing proportions of children’s time. We start by outlining the rationale for children’s PSB, before briefly unpacking the pressures it faces. Using schedule analysis of children’s channels in five European countries, PSB’s distinctiveness from US transnationals is demonstrated by higher lev...
This submission addresses the needs of child audiences within the transforming media landscape and a...
This article evaluates the performance of public service broadcasters in the area of children’s tele...
Focusing on the case of the BBC iPlayer and placing it within broader national and international dev...
The provision of children's content should be a key constituent of the public service brand, but has...
While the internet has facilitated a proliferation in children’s media offerings and platforms, tele...
Since its inception, the relationship between television and the child audience has been the subject...
Children’s programming has been at the heartland of the public service broadcasting remit since the ...
Work in progress: Please ask before quoting Anna Home, Chair, Save Kids ’ TV argued that “children ...
CBeebies, the BBC’s brand for young children, has become a successful public service undertaking, la...
This article analyses the key strategies for serving children that were developed in Nordic public b...
This article analyses the key strategies for serving children that were developed in Nordic public b...
The ubiquity of digital distribution makes the very idea of children’s ‘television’ seem almost anti...
This paper examines the changing production ecology of British pre-school television in light of dev...
This paper traces the development of children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian ...
The television broadcasting industry is subject to an exceptionally high level of public interventio...
This submission addresses the needs of child audiences within the transforming media landscape and a...
This article evaluates the performance of public service broadcasters in the area of children’s tele...
Focusing on the case of the BBC iPlayer and placing it within broader national and international dev...
The provision of children's content should be a key constituent of the public service brand, but has...
While the internet has facilitated a proliferation in children’s media offerings and platforms, tele...
Since its inception, the relationship between television and the child audience has been the subject...
Children’s programming has been at the heartland of the public service broadcasting remit since the ...
Work in progress: Please ask before quoting Anna Home, Chair, Save Kids ’ TV argued that “children ...
CBeebies, the BBC’s brand for young children, has become a successful public service undertaking, la...
This article analyses the key strategies for serving children that were developed in Nordic public b...
This article analyses the key strategies for serving children that were developed in Nordic public b...
The ubiquity of digital distribution makes the very idea of children’s ‘television’ seem almost anti...
This paper examines the changing production ecology of British pre-school television in light of dev...
This paper traces the development of children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian ...
The television broadcasting industry is subject to an exceptionally high level of public interventio...
This submission addresses the needs of child audiences within the transforming media landscape and a...
This article evaluates the performance of public service broadcasters in the area of children’s tele...
Focusing on the case of the BBC iPlayer and placing it within broader national and international dev...