The House of Lords Communications Committee has begun its inquiry into media plurality. This is significant: as MPP pointed out previously the Leveson Report directly passed to Parliament several questions on media plurality and ownership, and this starts the process for picking up the neglected ‘structural’ agenda of Leveson. After reviewing the evidence, two particular sticking points stand out. The first involves determining a workable method for measuring whether there is an insufficiency of of media plurality within the market. The second involves the proposed solutions to be used to address plurality concerns when an organisation under review has been found to constitute an undue concentration
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Efforts are being made to address the issue of media plurality at both the UK and European level. Co...
Robin Foster is an adviser on strategy, policy and regulation in the media and communications sector...
The Leveson Report recommended Parliament review existing law on media ownership and media plurality...
On 17 May the House of Lords Communications Committee published the evidence it received in its cons...
Chris Dawes, an industry veteran and Senior Visiting Fellow at the LSE, analyses the Government’s re...
In another response to the report on media plurality just published by the House of Lords Communicat...
The Leveson Inquiry debated media plurality in the UK, and the implication of concentrated media pow...
The timing of Harriet Harman’s intervention on media ownership yesterday was interesting. It came ju...
Will media convergence require a much more far reaching shakeup of media regulation than the governm...
Speaking for the annual Charles Wheeler Lecture on Journalism at Westminster University, Shadow Cult...
Justin Schlosberg, from Birkbeck, University of London, responds to this week’s publication of Ofcom...
Setting up a judge-led inquiry into press standards had a number of advantages when compared to prev...
If News Corp’s decision to spin-off Sky News – paving the way towards the complete acquisition of BS...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Efforts are being made to address the issue of media plurality at both the UK and European level. Co...
Robin Foster is an adviser on strategy, policy and regulation in the media and communications sector...
The Leveson Report recommended Parliament review existing law on media ownership and media plurality...
On 17 May the House of Lords Communications Committee published the evidence it received in its cons...
Chris Dawes, an industry veteran and Senior Visiting Fellow at the LSE, analyses the Government’s re...
In another response to the report on media plurality just published by the House of Lords Communicat...
The Leveson Inquiry debated media plurality in the UK, and the implication of concentrated media pow...
The timing of Harriet Harman’s intervention on media ownership yesterday was interesting. It came ju...
Will media convergence require a much more far reaching shakeup of media regulation than the governm...
Speaking for the annual Charles Wheeler Lecture on Journalism at Westminster University, Shadow Cult...
Justin Schlosberg, from Birkbeck, University of London, responds to this week’s publication of Ofcom...
Setting up a judge-led inquiry into press standards had a number of advantages when compared to prev...
If News Corp’s decision to spin-off Sky News – paving the way towards the complete acquisition of BS...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Efforts are being made to address the issue of media plurality at both the UK and European level. Co...
Robin Foster is an adviser on strategy, policy and regulation in the media and communications sector...