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[ecrea] New Book: "Media Systems and Communication Policies in Latin America"
Sun Nov 23 21:27:43 GMT 2014
We are pleased to announce that the book “Media Systems and
Communication Policies in Latin America” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014,
Global Media Policy and Business Series) is out.
More details here:
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/media-systems-and-communication-policies-in-latin-america-manuel-alejandro-guerrero/?K=9781137409041
For the past four decades, key institutional and political changes have
greatly impacted media systems and communication policies across Latin
America. Two contrasting yet overlapping developments are observable: on
the one hand, the increase and continuity of high levels of media
concentration prompted by market-oriented policies and a historical
collusion between media and (authoritarian) political elites like in
Mexico, Central America, Brazil, Peru or Colombia. On the other hand, in
the past 10 years we have also witnessed a trend allegedly intended to
reverse such patterns of media concentration: a reemergence of the
State’s interventionist role in promoting, shaping, administering and
controlling communications policies and media reform –often for the
benefit of the government— as in countries like Venezuela, Bolivia,
Argentina or Ecuador. However, despite their claims, none of these
trends has fully achieved pluralism and diversity nor guaranteed freedom
of speech or
journalism quality. Instead, both private and state-run media systems
continue to be captured by political and economic interests in varying
degrees and operated within the same context of clientelistic relations
and discretional, uneven application of regulation and the law.
Despite some democratic advances in the political landscape and ad-hoc
regulations and legal frameworks in some Latin American countries, is
the glass half-full or half-empty in regard to media, communication and
cultural policies that guarantee freedom of speech, widespread access to
information and the right to communication? Are legal frameworks and
media policies effectively working towards the development of
politically plural and socially diverse media systems? What is the stake
of local, regional and global dimensions, institutions and actors in
shaping media and communication policies in Latin America? What is the
contribution of this region to the understanding of global media policy?
Media Systems and Communication Policies in Latin America (Palgrave
Macmillan, 2014) addresses these questions with new insights and a
proposed theoretical framework that functions as the prevalent model of
media and communications in Latin America: the “captured liberal model”.
With c
ontributions by established and emerging scholars from Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru
and Venezuela, the common theme found across the case studies is that
there are various formal or informal means of intervention and capture
of journalism, media systems, communication and cultural policies—from
overarching states, political institutions and actors to private
interests. The chapters thus address the way in which current
conceptions of journalism and its practices, as well as market-oriented
vis-a-vis state-protected policies fail to guarantee pluralism,
communication rights and diversity.
About the Editors
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero, PhD, is Professor of Communications at
Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City.
Mireya Márquez-Ramírez, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Journalism
Studies and Media Theory at Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City.
Table of contents:
Introduction: Communications Policies and Media Systems in the Age of
(anti) Neoliberal Politics
Mireya Márquez-Ramírez and Manuel Alejandro Guerrero
1. Latin America Media and the Limitations of the 'Globalization' Paradigm
Silvio Waisbord
2. The 'Liberal-Captured' Model of Media Systems in Latin America
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero
3. In Search of a model for the Colombian Media System Today
Catalina Montoya Londoño
4. Media Systems and Political Action in Peru
Javier Protzel
5. The Complex Relationship Between the Media and the Political System
in Argentina: From Co-Option to Polarization
Jorge Liotti
6. Pluralism, Digitalization and the Contemporary Challenges of Media
Policy in El Salvador
José Luis Benítez
7. Media and Politicians in Guatemala: A Marriage That Will Last Until
Money Do Them Part
Silvio René Gramajo
8. The State in Pursuit of Hegemony over the Media: The Chávez Model
Andrés Cañizález
9. Clashing Powers in Bolivia: The Tensions Between Evo Morales'
Government and the Private Media in Bolivia
Víctor Quintanilla
10. State Intervention and Market Structures: the New Overview of
Argentinian Audio-Visual Sector
Guillermo Mastrini, Martín Becerra and Santiago Marino
11. Public Service Broadcasting and Media Reform in Brazil in
Comparative Perspective
Carolina Matos
12. Globalization and History in Brazil: Communication, Culture and
Development Policies at the Crossroads
César Ricardo Bolaño
13. The Publishing Industries in Ibero-America: Challenges and Diversity
in the Digital World
Stella Puente
14. The Global Notion of Journalism: a Hindrance to the Democratization
of the Public Space in Chile
Rodrigo Araya
15. Post-Authoritarian Politics in Neoliberal Days: Revising Media and
Journalism Transition in Mexico
Mireya Márquez-Ramírez
16. The 'Capture' of Media Systems, Policies and Industries in Latin
America: Concluding Remarks
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero and Mireya Márquez-Ramírez
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