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British Television Policy: A Reader (Media Policy)
 
 
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British Television Policy: A Reader (Media Policy) [Hardcover]

Bob Franklin (Editor)

Price: $150.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

August 24, 2001 0415198712 978-0415198714
British Television Policy: A Reader provides a forum for the significant policy debates which have informed and shaped television broadcasting since the publication in 1986 of the Peacock Committee Report on the financing of the BBC. The Reader presents key documents and critically analyses their impact on the organisation, financial resources, programme content, editorial philosophy and the regulatory environment of television broadcasting.
Recognising that policy making is not wholly a prerogative of government, British Television Policy provides readers with access to a wide range of statutory and non-governmental documents which have affected British broadcasting legislation: Acts of Parliament; Private Members' Bills; Select Committee Reports; Official statements by Ministers; Parliamentary inquiries such as the Davies Report; Policy documents prepared by interest groups such as the Campaign for Quality Television and the Voice of the Listener and Viewer; Strategic announcements from the ITC; Statements from the BBC and ITV; Public lectures by media owners and executives such as Rupert Murdoch and Richard Eyre; Commentaries from media academics and media analysts.
Beginning with a comprehensive editorial introduction which details television policy since 1945, the Reader is arranged in thematic sections which explore the purpose of television broadcasting, the financing of television, broadcasting policy and quality, regulation, and the relationship of broadcasting and politics. Each section is accompanied by an editor's introduction and commentary and the Reader is supported by a glossary and a guide to further reading.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Bob Franklin is Professor of Media Communications in the Department of Sociological Studies at the University of Sheffield. His publications include Making the Local News, Social Policy, the Media and Representation, Hard Pressed: Newspaper Reporting of Social Work and Newszak and the News Media.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
JOHN REITH the first Director-General of the BBC, was convinced that broadcasting should constitute a public service rather than being organised according to free-market principles, with funding derived from advertising or sponsorship and with the profit motive impelling programming decisions. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
licence supplement, full broadcasting market, party political broadcasting, television broadcasting policy, digital tax, analogue option, public interest broadcasting, digital supplement, franchise auction, content regulator, public service broadcasting, parliamentary coverage, licence payers, television policy, public service broadcasters, licence fee, regional programming, factual programmes, serious documentaries, broadcasting bill, new regulatory body, due impartiality, spectrum scarcity, producer choice, television current affairs
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Broadcasting Act, White Paper, Northern Ireland, House of Commons, Network Centre, Green Paper, John Birt, Broadcasting Standards Commission, Peacock Committee, Prime Minister, Broadcasting Standards Council, Home Secretary, New Future For Communications, Greg Dyke, Network First, Regulating Communications, Chris Smith, The Times, Douglas Hurd, Extending Choice, Thames Television, Carlton Communications, Dennis Potter, House of Lords, Margaret Thatcher
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