This comparative study addresses the policies and practices of community television in the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada. In particular, the author examines how community media organizations are transforming themselves to meet the demands of a digital world, and how these experiences are reflected in policy and regulation. Findings suggest that the policies governing community television do not correspond to what has been experienced by practitioners. Drawing from theories of the public sphere, the argument is made that policy does a disservice to community television by failing to acknowledge the importance of place, bodies, and practice. This is problematic, as it fails to distinguish community media from user-generat...
The concept of localism in the policies and regulations of Western media systems has been a conten...
In the last three decades the emergence and development of community media across Europe has been ma...
Community media performs various social roles including the production of collective identities, the...
The history of community media contains such extreme episodes because of its challenge to the domina...
This thesis examines broadcast policies and policy documents in Canada and the United States to dete...
The internet provides a means for non-professional media-makers to produce and publish their...
The advent of television technologies has significantly restructured the context within which commun...
This article looks at the changing notion of access in communications policy. It compares the regime...
In policy terms, community media are known as the "third sector" of the media. The descrip...
The chapter examines the history of the struggle for the recognition of community media by governmen...
In policy terms, community media are known as the “third sector” of the media. The description refle...
Will community television one day be lamented in the same way as the Glenn Valley Bridge Club in Pen...
Abstract / In this article the legacy of struggle by community radio in the West is analysed from a ...
In policy terms, community media are known as the “third sector” of the media. The description refle...
The advent of television technologies has significantly restructured the context within which commun...
The concept of localism in the policies and regulations of Western media systems has been a conten...
In the last three decades the emergence and development of community media across Europe has been ma...
Community media performs various social roles including the production of collective identities, the...
The history of community media contains such extreme episodes because of its challenge to the domina...
This thesis examines broadcast policies and policy documents in Canada and the United States to dete...
The internet provides a means for non-professional media-makers to produce and publish their...
The advent of television technologies has significantly restructured the context within which commun...
This article looks at the changing notion of access in communications policy. It compares the regime...
In policy terms, community media are known as the "third sector" of the media. The descrip...
The chapter examines the history of the struggle for the recognition of community media by governmen...
In policy terms, community media are known as the “third sector” of the media. The description refle...
Will community television one day be lamented in the same way as the Glenn Valley Bridge Club in Pen...
Abstract / In this article the legacy of struggle by community radio in the West is analysed from a ...
In policy terms, community media are known as the “third sector” of the media. The description refle...
The advent of television technologies has significantly restructured the context within which commun...
The concept of localism in the policies and regulations of Western media systems has been a conten...
In the last three decades the emergence and development of community media across Europe has been ma...
Community media performs various social roles including the production of collective identities, the...