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Lin, Cong; Jackson, Liz – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Hong Kong, as a former colony of the United Kingdom, is characterised as a hybrid of East and West. Its colonial history is commonly seen as establishing many positive aspects of Hong Kong and shaping good qualities of its people, such as the value of rule of law, free speech, freedom of the press, and fluency in English. Yet the majority of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Foreign Policy, Asian History
Havighurst, Robert J. – Notre Dame Journal of Education, 1970
Describes a mythical professor-author who writes of the period 1970-1984, in which organized schools are abolished because they prevent learning. Mythical political struggles and alternate means of education are explored. (DM)
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Educational Innovation, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
Muchnik, Melvyn M. – 1972
The author discusses the legal and extra-legal restrictions placed on public broadcasting stations, with respect to dissemination of political information. Although public broadcasting systems presumably exist as an alternative medium free of the commercial and time pressures that commercial stations face, the author claims that restrictions on…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Broadcast Television, Freedom of Speech, Government Role
Meehan, Niall; Bell, Des – 1986
The challenge to public service forms of broadcasting posed by the adoption of neo-liberal communication policy strategies by a number of western European governments has presented the left with a dilemma. Traditionally these public corporations have been characterized as ideological instruments of class domination. Today, however, sections of the…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Capitalism, Censorship, Economic Development
Oduko, Segun – 1986
This paper argues that new technologies, which play significant roles in the process of communication, may solve some problems, but they also tend to create new ones. A discussion of the various problems encountered in Nigeria, where an appreciable penetration of portable video cameras and recorders has given the public more access to, and choice…
Descriptors: Audiences, Broadcast Industry, Censorship, Communications
Strouse, James C. – 1975
The purpose of this book is to explore the effects of public opinion on governmental policy making, with a special focus on the role of the mass media in this process. Specific areas covered include political campaigning, the President and the press, blacks and the media, and cable television. Topics of discussion in the ten chapters are: linkage…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cable Television, Government Role, Information Dissemination
Altschull, J. Herbert – 1983
Differences in journalism education across the world reflect differences in political, economic, and social environments. Journalism education in the United States, which began in the age of progressivism and reflected the values of the time, has emphasized the press's objectivity and independence, an independence built on its reliance on…
Descriptors: Communications, Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Educational Development
Rivers, William L.; And Others – 1971
The focus throughout this second edition is on the 1970's and the impact of mass communication on contemporary society. Analyzing the ways in which communication affects and is, in turn, affected by society, the book examines the social, economic, and intellectual environments in which the media operate. Two intellectual factors which have had the…
Descriptors: American History, Broadcast Industry, Communications, Economic Factors
Council of Europe, Strasbourg (France). – 1976
The report contains 39 speeches by cultural affairs ministers at a 1976 Council of Europe conference in Oslo, Norway. The focus is on four themes: (1) the challenge of cultural policy in a changing society, (2) cultural policy as an instrument for improving the quality of life, (3) encouraging artistic creation, and (4) European cultural…
Descriptors: Art Expression, Citizen Participation, Conference Reports, Creative Development
Goldhamer, Herbert, Ed.; Westrum, Ronald – 1970
The principal technological developments that underlie the communication revolution, especially the transistor and the computer, are reviewed in a nontechnical way. A number of devices and communication subsystems, such as cable television, ultramicrofiche, and communication satellites, that make use of these developments are then described,…
Descriptors: Cable Television, Communications, Communications Satellites, Computer Science
Gilder, Eric – 1987
The telecommunication revolution in the USSR is creating structural change in the culture, encompassing media, societal, and ideological systems. In the process, it is replacing traditional Soviet collectivist values with individualist, western values. Increasingly easy access to western ideas through VCRs, direct broadcast satellites (DBS), and…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Communication Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communications Satellites