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Professor Robin Mansell London School of Economics and Political Science LSE Alumnae, New Delhi, July 2009 Media for Democracy and Development.

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Presentation on theme: "Professor Robin Mansell London School of Economics and Political Science LSE Alumnae, New Delhi, July 2009 Media for Democracy and Development."— Presentation transcript:

1 Professor Robin Mansell London School of Economics and Political Science LSE Alumnae, New Delhi, July 2009 Media for Democracy and Development

2 What kind of media, democratisation and development is wanted?

3 The promise of technological innovation – the economist’s view “Knowledge has been at the heart of economic growth and the gradual rise in levels of social well-being since time immemorial. The ability invent and innovate, that is to create new knowledge and new ideas that are then embodied in products, processes and organizations, has always served to fuel development”. (Paul A David and Dominique Foray 2003).

4 Some see media and development as being about technology only.

5 We start with Development and Democracy Authoritarian democracy Partial democracy Liberal representative democracy Participatory democracy –Each is context specific and has different implications for the media and for development.

6 Models of Media and Democratisation Media as distribution channels Media as actors and agents –Agenda setting –Framing –Supportive or critical

7 Media and Democratisation Transformation from propaganda machine to (pluralistic) democratic forum. Delay of media legislation due to overload. Media policy often one of the most contentious issues. Disputes over control of the media (esp. Broadcasting). Conflicts over the role of the media in an emerging democracy. Growing hostility between government and media.

8 Media and Citizen Roles Citizen as video reporter Citizen as part of a TV forum Citizen as analyst Citizen as campaigning journalist Tools: –SMS and email –Online video –Online databases –Social networking

9 Media and Political Empowerment New voices and protest movements. New communicative practices. Greater equality of hubs and spokes of networks. Local media content production. Multiple spheres of influence.

10 Media and Democratisation: Empowerment or passivity? Whether networked insurgent communities can change ‘hearts and minds’ is tempered by the way dominant actors manage to create new electronic enclosures to contain these communities. Manuel Castells, 2009

11 Media and Development Cultural diversity - plurality in all social spheres of activity. Governance for inclusion and poverty reduction. Education contributing to well-being and choice. Dignity, equal and inalienable rights & entitlements. Participatory media – what does this really mean?

12 Media research Media & Governance Media & Professional Education Media & Cultural Diversity Research Methods Human Rights, Media and Communication Monitoring Media for Development Access and Literacy Participatory Media and Communication Representation by Media Strategic Media Policies and Action Plans

13 Conclusions No universal model of democracy. Weak democratic institutions are a threat to the independence of the media. Conflictual and irresponsible media can be a threat to a fragile democracy. Local forms of journalism emerge. Weak PSB and commercialisation leads to the absence of a forum for public debate.


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