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Howkins, John – Journal of Communication, 1979
Describes the issues and interests to be discussed at the World Administrative Radio Conference in September, 1979. Includes definitions of principles for the use of the frequency spectrum, rights and duties of users, reallocation of frequency bands, and the need for principles to guide international cooperation. (JMF)
Descriptors: Conferences, International Relations, Mass Media, Opinions
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Zassoursky, Yassen; Losev, Sergei – Journal of Communication, 1981
A Soviet analysis claims that the MacBride Report represents a serious contribution to the cause of placing information in the service of peace and progress. (PD)
Descriptors: Information Networks, International Relations, Journalism, Mass Media
Ruidl, Richard A. – 1978
During a time of crisis, it is instructive to examine the national press of Japan and Korea, two economic allies that view each other with suspicion. The Japanese press is relatively free and liberal-oriented on the domestic scene but is closely aligned with big business and government with regard to international concerns. The South Korean…
Descriptors: Censorship, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries, Freedom of Speech
Nascimento, Christopher A. – 1979
An illustration of the dependence and vulnerability of the Third World in relation to the First World--especially North American--news flow is illustrated by the news coverage of the events surrounding Jim Jones and the People's Temple in Guyana. Three editorial attitudes emerged in that coverage: an almost total absence of interest in the country…
Descriptors: Bias, Censorship, Communication Problems, Developing Nations
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Ravault, Rene-Jean – Journal of Communication, 1981
Argues that, contrary to what many proponents believe, the recommendations of the MacBride Report would also help stop the rapidly deteriorating military, diplomatic, and economic situation of the Anglo American countries from which the most important international communication flow originates. (PD)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Communications, Developed Nations, International Relations
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Righter, Rosemary – Journal of Communication, 1979
Argues that the compromises involved in the final acceptance of the UNESCO Mass Media Declaration favored none of the parties involved. The developing Third World nations gained the most by the declaration's recognition of the present imbalance in news reporting. (JMF)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Information Systems, International Organizations, International Relations
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Nordenstreng, Kaarle – Journal of Communication, 1979
Reviews the three stages involved in the development of the UNESCO Mass Media Declaration: the developing countries' initiative, the Western counter move, and the mutual accommodation in a spirit of realistic compromise. (JMF)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Information Systems, International Organizations, International Relations
Watson, Keith – Media in Education and Development, 1982
Examines the role of the mass media in the issues debated in the Brandt report, a document prepared in England which advocates economic interdependence between developing and developed nations. In addition to informing the public, the media should play a supporting role in development education in schools and colleges. (JJD)
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Economic Development, Global Approach
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Singh, Kusum; Gross, Bertram – Journal of Communication, 1981
Examines the key tenets of the MacBride Report and the critical response by scholars and journalists. Includes the text of the Declaration of Talloires adopted by journalists from 20 countries at the Voices of Freedom Conference, 1981. (PD)
Descriptors: Communications, Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Freedom of Speech
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Keller, Edward; Roel, Ronald – Journal of Communication, 1979
Examines how interactions among institutions of education, public media, business, and government present non-American culture within American life through foreign languages or presentations of foreign culture in English. Concludes that a lack of focus of national cultural policy fosters an insensitivity to foreign language and culture. (JMF)
Descriptors: Business, Cultural Awareness, Educational Policy, Foreign Culture
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Kroloff, George M. – Journal of Communication, 1979
Discusses the role and possible impact of Congressional action on United States' policy at the 1979 World Administrative Radio Conference. (JMF)
Descriptors: Conferences, Federal Government, Global Approach, Government Role
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Lekic, Maria – 1991
It is widely believed that poetry in the Soviet Union has lost its place to newspapers and periodicals that have robbed literature of its readers. Prior to glasnost, non-official literature in the Soviet Union was more than a literary event; it was often the only mode of political discourse available to the literate public. This paper suggests…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Foreign Countries, International Relations, Literary Criticism
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Mosco, Vincent – Journal of Communication, 1979
Outlines the responsibilities of various government organizations and agencies that play a major role in the international arena. Speculates on the impact of the policymaking structure, with its recent changes, on that arena. (JMF)
Descriptors: Agencies, Conferences, Federal Government, Global Approach
Shah, Hemant – 1984
Developing countries have addressed the problem of unequal world information flow by proposing the New World Information Order (NWIO), a set of guidelines suggesting a framework for the establishment of more equitable flow of information. Although the unanimous adoption of the 1980 NWIO resolution by Unesco has done much to legitimize Third World…
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Government Role, Information Dissemination
Breen, Myles P. – 1979
The United States is a major exporter but a minor importer of films and television programs; this situation has been described as a one-way flow of information from the United States to other nations. Although the official United States position is one of dedication to the two-way flow of communication, the "majority" view is that the…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Foreign Countries, Information Dissemination, Information Sources
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