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Media Systems and Communication Policies in Latin America proposes, tests and analyses the liberal captured model. It explores to what extent to which globalisation, marketization, commercialism, regional bodies and the nation State redefine the media's role in Latin American societies.
Auteur
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero, Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico Mireya Márquez-Ramírez, Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico Rodrigo Araya, Pontificia Universidad Católica of Valparaíso, Chile Martín Becerra, National University of Quilmes, Argentina José Luis Benítez, Central American University, El Salvador César Ricardo Bolaño, Federal University of Sergipe, Brazil Andrés Cañizález, Andrés Bello Catholic University, Venezuela Silvio René Gramajo, Rafael Landívar University, Guatemala Jorge Liotti, Catholic University of Argentina, Argentina Santiago Marino, National University of de Quilmes, Argentina Guillermo Mastrini, National University of de Quilmes, Argentina Carolina Matos, City University London, UK Catalina Montoya, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogota, Colombia Javier Protzel, Universidad del Pacífico of Lima, Peru Stella Puente, Tres de Febrero University, Argentina Víctor Quintanilla Inter-American Association for Environmental Protection, Mexico Silvio Waisbord, George Washington University, USA
Contenu
Contents List of Figures List of Tables Notes on Contributors Preface Introduction: Communications Policies and Media Systems in the Age of (anti) Neoliberal Politics; Mireya Márquez-Ramírez and Manuel Alejandro Guerrero 1. Latin America Media and the Limitations of the 'Globalization' Paradigm; Silvio Waisbord 2. The 'Liberal-Captured' Model of Media Systems in Latin America; Manuel Alejandro Guerrero 3. In Search of a model for the Colombian Media System Today; Catalina Montoya Londoño 4. Media Systems and Political Action in Peru; Javier Protzel 5. The Complex Relationship Between the Media and the Political System in Argentina: From Co-Option to Polarization; Jorge Liotti 6. Pluralism, Digitalization and the Contemporary Challenges of Media Policy in El Salvador; José Luis Benítez 7. Media and Politicians in Guatemala: A Marriage That Will Last Until Money Do Them Part; Silvio René Gramajo 8. The State in Pursuit of Hegemony over the Media: The Chávez Model; Andrés Cañizález 9. Clashing Powers in Bolivia: The Tensions Between Evo Morales' Government and the Private Media in Bolivia; Víctor Quintanilla 10. State Intervention and Market Structures: the New Overview of Argentinian Audio-Visual Sector; Guillermo Mastrini, Martín Becerra and Santiago Marino 11. Public Service Broadcasting and Media Reform in Brazil in Comparative Perspective; Carolina Matos 12. Globalization and History in Brazil: Communication, Culture and Development Policies at the Crossroads; César Bolaño 13. The Publishing Industries in Ibero-America: Challenges and Diversity in the Digital World; Stella Puente 14. The Global Notion of Journalism: a Hindrance to the Democratization of the Public Space in Chile; Rodrigo Araya 15. Post-Authoritarian Politics in Neoliberal Days: Revising Media and Journalism Transition in Mexico; Mireya Márquez-Ramírez 16. The 'Capture' of Media Systems, Policies and Industries in Latin America: Concluding Remarks; Manuel Alejandro Guerrero andMireya Márquez-Ramírez