In this chapter on Singapore’s authoritarian control of the media, Terence Lee and Lars Willnat seek to identify the tactics and strategies employed by the Singapore government to manage the media’s ability to engage in political communication. They provide a summary of recent research on political communication research in Singapore and consider why there is a perpetual dearth of critical studies on this subject. The chapter then looks at the mechanisms of media control in Singapore, beginning with traditional media and followed by digital media control
This paper examines censorship and surveillance in Singapore, particularly from the 1960s to 2016. I...
The media environment of Singapore is characterized by (i) a monopoly of the mainstream media and (i...
This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, wi...
In this chapter on Singapore?s authoritarian control of the media, Terence Lee and Lars Willnat seek...
Singapore's government justifies the regulation and control of the media by drawing on the “Developm...
This edited volume provides a critical review of political communication research conducted in Asia ...
This book explores this inherent contradiction present in most facets of Singaporean media, cultural...
This chapter offers a contemporary analysis of communication governance—or the way in which communic...
This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, wi...
The advent of information technology has generally been heralded as a force for the breakdown of aut...
Singapore's television media, notwithstanding the island's economic successes, is widely considered ...
Singapore’s status as one of the most networked society in the Asia- Pacific region is rarely disput...
In a matter of a few decades, the media has increasingly developed from merely a functional tool to ...
Common perceptions and literature on media in Singapore suggest an authoritarian government that eit...
This study examines the communication process and structure that situates the political communicatio...
This paper examines censorship and surveillance in Singapore, particularly from the 1960s to 2016. I...
The media environment of Singapore is characterized by (i) a monopoly of the mainstream media and (i...
This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, wi...
In this chapter on Singapore?s authoritarian control of the media, Terence Lee and Lars Willnat seek...
Singapore's government justifies the regulation and control of the media by drawing on the “Developm...
This edited volume provides a critical review of political communication research conducted in Asia ...
This book explores this inherent contradiction present in most facets of Singaporean media, cultural...
This chapter offers a contemporary analysis of communication governance—or the way in which communic...
This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, wi...
The advent of information technology has generally been heralded as a force for the breakdown of aut...
Singapore's television media, notwithstanding the island's economic successes, is widely considered ...
Singapore’s status as one of the most networked society in the Asia- Pacific region is rarely disput...
In a matter of a few decades, the media has increasingly developed from merely a functional tool to ...
Common perceptions and literature on media in Singapore suggest an authoritarian government that eit...
This study examines the communication process and structure that situates the political communicatio...
This paper examines censorship and surveillance in Singapore, particularly from the 1960s to 2016. I...
The media environment of Singapore is characterized by (i) a monopoly of the mainstream media and (i...
This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, wi...