Document detail

Media movements: civil society and media policy reform in Latin America

London: Zed Books (2016), 214 pp., bibliogr. p.186-205, index
ISBN 978-1-78360-462-3
"Our interest in this book is to examine the contribution of citizens’ movements to a uniquely intense period of policy reforms in public communication in Latin America during the 2000–2015 period. We examine a range of experiences of citizen participation to reshape media systems and change media policy-making processes in the region. The analysis dips in and out of cases of media activism at both national and regional levels. Because we are interested in understanding the overall characteristics of media activism and policy reforms as well as similarities and differences in the region, we cast a wide analytical net by looking at various experiences. We are less interested in producing a granular analysis of particular experiences by country or type of media reform than in finding connecting threads among media movements in terms of goals, strategies, and impact. Whereas our analysis primarily draws from the cases of Argentina, Ecuador, Mexico, and Uruguay, we also make references to experiences in other countries. We chose these countries because, although they present similar levels of citizen activism on various media policies, the outcomes have been notoriously different." (Introduction, p.2)
Contents
Introduction, 1
1 Limited Pluralism and "Elite-Captured" Policies, 15
2 The Field of Media Activism: Organizations and Demands, 39
3 Strategies, 62
4 Policy Reforms, 84
5 Political Opportunities, 103
6 Why Transnational Activism Matters, 124
7 Policy Implementation, 149
Conclusion: The Contributions of Media Movements, 172