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The Right to Communicate: Historical Hopes, Global Debates and Future Premises


Publication Date

October 1, 2009

Summary

This book is devoted to an analysis of the right to communicate. It takes the reader through the historical, socio-cultural, and political backdrop that sets the stage for an understanding of why the right to communicate is important in a globalised, digital world. It discusses the global debates on the topic and examines premises for the future.

It is divided into three parts, as follows:

  1. Historical Hopes
    • Chapter 1 ‘The Baron of the Right to Communicate: Jean d’Arcy (1913-1983)’ by Aliaa Dakroury.
    • Chapter 2 ‘The Roots of the Right to Communicate and Emerging Participatory Policy’ by Jenifer S. Winter and Dan J. Wedemeyer.
    • Chapter 3 ‘Communication as a Human Right: Picking up the Challenge?’ by Cees J. Hamelink and Julia Hoffmann.
    • Chapter 4 ‘A Historical Testimony: From the New World Information and Communication Order to the Digital Order’ by Mustapha Masmoudi.
    • Chapter 5 ‘Communication Rights and the Millennium Development Goals’ by Philip Lee.
  2. Global Debates
    • Chapter 6 ‘The Right to Communicate: From Intergovernmental to Global Civil Society Debates’ by Lauren B. Movius.
    • Chapter 7 ‘Skimming the Cream, Throttling the Tubes, Doing the Policy Laundering, and Jiving to the Supply-Side Boogie: Challenges to the Right to Communicate in Canada’ by Leslie Regan Shade.
    • Chapter 8 ‘Rights on Paper, but Not in Practice: A History of State Censorship in Canada’ by Patricia Mazepa.
    • Chapter 9 ‘Communication Rights are Human Rights: A Case Study of Thailand’s Media’ by Jan Servaes, Patchanee Malikhao, and Thaniya Pinprayong.
    • Chapter 10 ‘Peace Journalism: The Right to Communicate and the Open Broadcast Network in Bosnia’ by Vladimir Bratic, Susan Dente Ross, and Hyeonjin Kang-Graham.
  3. Future Premises
    • Chapter 11 ‘Putting Practice into Theory: A Right to Communicate Research Strategy’ by William F. Birdsall.
    • Chapter 12 ‘The Right to Communicate Religious Speech in the Public Sphere’ by Jason Hannan.
    • Chapter 13 ‘Communication “Postcards” from Canada: The Public Interest, the Right to Communicate, and Political Activism’ by Vanda Rideout.
    • Chapter 14 ‘Mass Media, Civil Society, and the Right to Communicate in Latin America’ by Miriam Wimmer and Octavio Penna Pieranti.
    • Chapter 15 ‘Alternative Arab Media and the Right to Communicate in the Middle East’ by El Mustapha Lahlali.

Publisher

Number of Pages

434

Cost

US$67.00

Contact

Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company

Customer Service Department
4050 Westmark Drive

Dubuque IA
52004-1840
United States
Tel: 563 589 1000 OR 1 800 228 0810
Fax: 800 772 9165 OR 563 589 1046

Source

The World Association for Christian Communication (WACC) Media Action website, index of articles published from January to June 2009.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site October 27 2009
Last Updated October 27 2009



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