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Media Concentration and Democracy
Why Ownership Matters
This book provides a normative critique of mass media ownership concentration.
C. Edwin Baker (Author)
9780521687881, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 11 December 2006
272 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm, 0.37 kg
"In Media Concentration and Democracy, theorist C. Edwin Baker, a University of Pennsylvania law professor, offers a comprehensive, idea-packed examination of media concentration."
Loren Ghiglione, Northwestern University
Firmly rooting its argument in democratic and economic theory, the book argues that a more democratic distribution of communicative power within the public sphere and a structure that provides safeguards against abuse of media power provide two of three primary arguments for ownership dispersal. It also shows that dispersal is likely to result in more owners who will reasonably pursue socially valuable journalistic or creative objectives rather than a socially dysfunctional focus on the 'bottom line'. The middle chapters answer those agents, including the Federal Communication Commission, who favor 'deregulation' and who argue that existing or foreseeable ownership concentration is not a problem. The final chapter evaluates the constitutionality and desirability of various policy responses to concentration, including strict limits on media mergers.
1. Democracy at the crossroads: why ownership matters
2. Not a real problem: many owners, many sources
3. Not a real problem: the market or the net will provide
4. First amendment guarantee of free press - an objection to regulation?
5. Solutions and responses.
Subject Areas: Press & journalism [KNTJ], Media, information & communication industries [KNT]