Tanzania: the Problems of Mass Media Development

1968 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham L. Mytton
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (141) ◽  
pp. 30-59
Author(s):  
Sarah Nelson

Abstract International news, and the technological infrastructures required to collect, distribute, and publish it, have long been battlegrounds of imperial ambition and anticolonial contestation. In the early 1960s, press professionals, engineers, and telecom officials from the global South elaborated a wide-ranging structural critique of the status quo, arguing that developing mass media required decolonizing international networks and global governance practices that perpetuated media inequality. But over the course of the decade, UNESCO began to invite research and expertise from American social scientists and engineers, who came to define UNESCO’s approach to satellite-based media development. By redefining the scope of media development to an instrumentalist vision of Westernization, such research eclipsed a broad, structural vision of reform, casting southern experts’ more radical designs into shadow. By recovering this history, the article tells a new story of the ideologies and governance practices that helped sustain global news inequality in the satellite age.


1971 ◽  
Vol os-18 (5) ◽  
pp. 227-233
Author(s):  
Donald K. Smith

In this the last of four articles centering on the topic “Literacy–And Then?” the author examines ways of evaluating mass media development. He finds a high correlation between both urbanization and per capita GNP on the one hand, and literacy on the other. Even better results would be obtained by using societies rather than countries as units of comparison. The author concludes by listing various kinds of supporting data that can be used in evaluating and planning: Both material factors and cultural factors.


Author(s):  
Hernando Gómez Gómez ◽  
Enrique Corrales Crespo

The modern society establishes a complex relationship that combines the visual overload derived from technology insertion which is adapted to the today´s needs and executed through devices swiftly embraced. In this certain sense, one of the most overloaded environments currently is, in fact, the photography. The internet and digital mass media development have promoted to get a surprising image surplus, impossible to distinguish between the real occurrence and the photographic observed event. Therefore, is necessary to contemplate a sustainable scenario in photography. It must determinate a balance between images which are produced, consumed and those which can be assumed by society. The photography evolution and the new denomination PostPhotography installs a brand new discourse initially literal, linked to words and needing a unit of speech to make exist the images.


1992 ◽  
Vol 49 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 41-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lennart Weibull ◽  
Magnus Anshelm

In this article we analyze the development of Swedish Media since the late 1970s in terms of structure, organization and output. The article is structured in two main parts. We analyze the structure and the output of Swedish media 1980 – 1990, and then we try to understand the Swedish media development in terms of the political, economic and social tendencies of Sweden during the same period of time. Four general trends in Swedish media are identified. The first trend is the increase in the output of most mass media. Secondly, the internationalization of the media contents is analyzed. The third is the increasing localization and regionalization of the media production. The final general trend identified, is the decreasing public control, and the increasing privatization of Swedish media. These trends are finally understood in the context of changes in the Swedish society during the same period of time.


Author(s):  
Delfina Ertanowska

This article is devoted to the questions of legends, myths as the first mass communication and their influence on the development of primary mass communication, in the border areas of Poland, Ukraine and Slovakia, inhabited by: Lemkos, Boykos and Huculs. In addition, an important element will be the beginning of media development, its effects and the comparison of the impact of the first mass media on society in confrontation with their modern counterparts. The article is based on sources of the formation of the first mass media and specific ethnic «journalism» on the native Slavic lands. Their influence on the Rusyns society and the formation of the media in the national consciousness in society. Description of the medium which educates the social masses, sometimes manipulates them in reference to their current substitutes. Keywords: Lemkos, mass communication, ethnic journalism, legends, myths.


2020 ◽  
pp. 363-374
Author(s):  
Ismail Sheikh Yusuf Ahmed
Keyword(s):  

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