Robin Mansell is Professor of New Media and the Internet at the LSE. In the latest post in our series on digital intermediaries and plurality, she argues that intermediaries are influencing media production and dissemination often in ways not fully understood by policymakers, implementing policy without oversight. Regulators have been unable to keep up with the pace of change and still rely on legislation geared towards traditional market structures. To protect the public interest, they will need to shift emphasis to a more holistic view of the media ecology rather than the piecemeal approach of the past
We conducted a study of Australia’s media content regulation system in the context of three major Fe...
If in William Blackstone\u27s time we might have thought of a person\u27s home as their castle, in M...
Launched on 26th May on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, ResPublica’s latest report, The Mission of Me...
Media research has long given special attention to the notion of a \u27gatekeeper\u27. With establis...
Purpose - The purposes of this paper are to deal with the questions: because search engines, social...
Increasing regulatory and doctrinal attention has recently focused on the problem of ‘platform power...
The regulation of internet intermediaries such as Facebook and Google has drawn increasing academic,...
Professor Hitchens, writing from Australia, sees a dramatically different regulatory framework in a ...
The regulation of internet intermediaries such as Facebook and Google has drawn increasing academic,...
This article sets out the emergent challenges and opportunities for developing effective and ‘future...
Only 3% of internet users have internet speeds slower than 2 mpbs and are without access to good bro...
This article sets out the emergent challenges and opportunities for developing effective and ‘future...
This Open Access volume provides an in-depth exploration of global policy and governance issues rela...
Platform regulation has become the cause celebre of technology regulation: a call to regulate the in...
Platforms have emerged as a new kind of regulatory object over a short period of time. There is acce...
We conducted a study of Australia’s media content regulation system in the context of three major Fe...
If in William Blackstone\u27s time we might have thought of a person\u27s home as their castle, in M...
Launched on 26th May on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, ResPublica’s latest report, The Mission of Me...
Media research has long given special attention to the notion of a \u27gatekeeper\u27. With establis...
Purpose - The purposes of this paper are to deal with the questions: because search engines, social...
Increasing regulatory and doctrinal attention has recently focused on the problem of ‘platform power...
The regulation of internet intermediaries such as Facebook and Google has drawn increasing academic,...
Professor Hitchens, writing from Australia, sees a dramatically different regulatory framework in a ...
The regulation of internet intermediaries such as Facebook and Google has drawn increasing academic,...
This article sets out the emergent challenges and opportunities for developing effective and ‘future...
Only 3% of internet users have internet speeds slower than 2 mpbs and are without access to good bro...
This article sets out the emergent challenges and opportunities for developing effective and ‘future...
This Open Access volume provides an in-depth exploration of global policy and governance issues rela...
Platform regulation has become the cause celebre of technology regulation: a call to regulate the in...
Platforms have emerged as a new kind of regulatory object over a short period of time. There is acce...
We conducted a study of Australia’s media content regulation system in the context of three major Fe...
If in William Blackstone\u27s time we might have thought of a person\u27s home as their castle, in M...
Launched on 26th May on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, ResPublica’s latest report, The Mission of Me...