Index
2021; Emerald Publishing Limited; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1108/s2050-206020210000022010
ISSN2050-2079
ResumoCitation (2021), "Index", Pait, H. and Laet, J. (Ed.) Media, Development and Democracy (Studies in Media and Communications, Vol. 22), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 135-141. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2050-206020210000022010 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2022 Heloisa Pait and Juliana Laet INDEX Index Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes. Abbott Coalition Government, 79 Advertisers, 72, 84 Advertising, 49 agencies, 72 restrictions, 82 Advertising and Marketing Communications Code, 76 Advertising Claims Board (ACB), 75 Advertising Code of Ethics, 72 Advertising Standards Board (ASB), 75, 83 African Bible College radio, 31–32 African Media Development Initiative, 48 African media systems, 26 American Association for Public Opinion Research, 118 Americanization, 25 Anti-advertising sentiment, 72 Australian advertising regulatory system, 85 Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA), 75, 81 Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA), 75 Australian broadcasting system, 77 Australian Broadcasting Tribunal (ABT), 74 Australian Communication Authority (ACA), 75 Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), 76, 78 Australian Consumer Law (ACL), 82 Australian economy, 84 Australian Food and Grocery Council (AFGC), 74 Australian National Health Preventive Agency (ANPHA), 79 Authoritarian regimes, 25 Authoritarian tradition, 95 under Putin, 102–104 Awareness, 21 Billboard Utilising Graffitists Against Unhealthy Promotions movement (BUGA-UP movement), 73–74 Bolsa-Família Program, 124 Book censorship, 12–14 Brazil foreign non-fiction titles published in, 20 non-fiction works by foreign authors published and censored in, 14–16 Brazilian Constitution (1989), 21 Brazilian military dictatorship, 13–14, 21 Brazilian Popular Music (MPB), 19 Brazilian welfare program, 129 Bribes, gifts and, 57–58 British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), 32 Broadcasting Services Act (1992), 74 Bureaucracy, 50 Bureaucratic capture, 50, 57 cultural capture, 59–60 gifts and bribes, 57–58 intersectional forms of political and bureaucratic capture, 57 legal capture, 59 retaliation and intimidation, 58–59 societal capture, 60–61 Capture, 49 Cashgate scandal, 36 Casual interactions, 119 Censored books, 16–18 Censorial regulations, 12–14 Censorship, 21 of culture, 11 laws, 20 reasons for, 12–14 Centralization of censorship, 12 Change, 24 Chemical weapon attacks, 47 Child domestic labor (CDL), 126–128 Children’s Code, 76, 81 Children’s Television Standards (CTS), 74 Citizenship, 126 Civic contexts, 121 Civilização Brasileira, 18–21 Coco Pops, 83 Code of Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP), 74 Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL), 1 Commercialization, 25 Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), 35 Common sense, 24, 28 liberal media model as, 36–38 Malawi’s liberal media model as, 30–36 Communication, 119 Communicative layers, 5 Communicative realms, 5–6 Communicative situation, focus group as, 120–123 Communist Party, 101 Communist principles, 100 Competition and Consumer Act (2010) (see Trade Practices Act (1974)) Conditionalities, 30 Conflictive situation, focus group as, 120–123 Contemporary Community Safeguards Inquiry, 80–81 Cowen, 24 Cultural capture, 51, 59 Cultural imperialism, 48 Daily emancipation, 119 De Beauvoir, Simone, 20 Deciphering, 129–130 Declaration of Rights of Man, 21 Decree 1077/70, 13 Decree 898, 13 Deliberative theory, 126 Democracy, 24, 84, 100 Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), 34 Development theory, 4 Developmental patrimonialism governance, 31–32 mandate, 37 Developmentality, 7, 24, 27–30, 37–38 Diário Oficial da União (DOU), 14 Difel, 18–20 Disinformation campaigns, 55–56 Divisão de Censura de Diversões Públicas (DCDP), 14 Dominance of state as political trend, 97–98 DStv, 34 Dynamic interpenetration of realms, 6 Early Russian publications, 97–98 Echo Moskvy, 107 Economic capture, 49, 53–54 intersectional forms of economic and political capture, 56–57 Economic developments, 72 Economic growth, 24 Educational policies, 5–6 Efficacy of self-regulation, 82–85 Ekonomicheskaya Gazeta, 107 Elio Gaspari, 20 Enemy image, 100 Equality, 24 Escobar, Arturo, 24 European Modernity, 5 European Union (EU), 26 Everyday conversation, 118 Face-to-face conversations, 1 Facebook marketing communication platform, 82 Feeling of democracy, 100 Ferguson, James, 24 Finlyandskaya Gazeta, 99 Focus groups, 120 communication on politics, 123–126 as communicative and conflictive situation, 120–123 procedure, 129 Food and Beverages: Advertising and Marketing Communications Code, 77 Food Code, 77, 86n3 Foods, 83 (see also Unhealthy food) and beverage advertisements, 74 industry self-regulation of food ads, 76–82 Foreign aid, 27 Foreign authors, 11–12 censored books, 16–18 national censorship, 20–21 non-fiction works by foreign authors published and censored in Brazil, 14–16 publishing houses Civilização Brasileira, Paz e Terra, José Alvaro, Sabiá, Saga and Difel, 18–20 reasons for censorship, 12–14 Fourth estate, 96 Frank, Andre Gunder, 24 Free market principles, 27 Freedom, 24 French Revolution, 96 Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), 21 GE06 Agreement, 34 General audience programming, 83 Gifts and bribes, 57–58 Global Forum on Media Development, 48 Global media studies, 3–4 Global South, 24, 26–27 Globalization, 24–25 Good governance, 24 GoTv, 34 Gramophone, 4 Group’s discussion, media material in, 126–129 Growth, 24 Gubernskiye vedomosti, 99 Healthier food, 83 Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs), 30 Home and Away, 83 Homogenization thesis, 25 Howard Government, 75 Human rights, 24 violations, 21 Human wellbeing, 75 Ideology, 24 Illiteracy, 7 Independence, 24 Index Librorum Prohibitorum, 7 Indigenous community in Amazon, 4 Individual liberty, 75 Industry self-regulation of food ads and industry initiatives, 76–82 Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), 35 Institutional Act Number 1 (AI1), 12 Institutional Act Number 5 (AI-5), 12 Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, the Brazilian (IBGE), 13 International Financial Institutions (IFIs), 29 International Monetary Fund (IMF), 26 International payments, 32 International Programme for Development of Communication (IPDC), 26 International Relations (IR), 29 International Telecommunication Union (ITU), 34 Internet advertising, 82 Intimidation, 58–59 Iraq, 8, 45–47, 49–50, 52, 56, 62 Iraqi Kurdistan, 46 disinformation campaigns, 55–56 economic capture, 53–54 findings, 53 intersectional forms of economic and political capture, 56–57 intersectional forms of political and bureaucratic capture, 57– media capture as concept, 49–51 media development, 47–48 media in, 46–47 method, 51–53 political capture, 54–55 US-led coalition occupation of, 47 Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), 46 José Alvaro, 18–20 Journalism in Soviet, 101 Journalistic attitude toward west, 100–101 Journalistic profession, 100 Journalists, 100 KFC, 84 Kommersant, 106 Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), 52 Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI), 46–47 Kursk, 94 Language, 24 Legal capture, 50, 59 Liberal democracy, 84–85 Liberal media model, 25, 27 developmentality, 28–30 liberal media model as common sense, 36–38 Malawi’s liberal media model as common sense, 30–36 name of development, 24–28 Liberal model, 3 Liberalization, 7 Literacy, 2, 4 LiveJournal, 107 Mad Money, 30 Malawi Broadcasting Corporation Act (MBC Act), 31 Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority (MARCA), 31 Malawi Congress Party (MCP), 31 Malawi Digital Broadcasting Policy, 34 Malawi Growth and Development Strategy, 35 MALAWI’s liberal media model as common sense, 30–36 Malraux, André, 20 Manufacturing sector, 72 Marxist thinking, 17 MasterChef, 80, 83 Media assistance, 48 under communist influence, 99–100 configurations, 3, 9 cooptation, 8 coverage, 94 in developing countries, 1 development, 1–3, 47–48 dynamic of, 6–7 economic trends, 104–106 freedom, 100 history, 95 in Iraqi Kurdistan, 46 material in group’s discussion, 126–129 participation, 2 political bias in, 106–108 segmentation, 6 Media capture, 46 (see also Bureaucratic capture) bureaucratic capture, 50 as concept, 49 cultural capture, 51 economic capture, 49 legal capture, 50 political capture, 50 societal capture, 51 typology of, 68–69 Media Council of Association, 72 Media Council of Australia (MCA), 72 Media Council of Malawi (MCM), 33 Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA), 33 Medical Act Bill, 125 Medical practitioners, 73 Middle East, 49, 59 Military dictatorship, 11 Modern media, 103 Modernity, 24 Modernization, 7, 25 Mount Soche Declaration, 36 Mtenga Watu, 31 Multinational meat processing, 4 Narrative identities, 122 National censorship, 20–21 National interests, traitors of, 102 National Preventative Health Taskforce (PHT), 78 National Security Law, 13 Neoliberalism, 75 News outlets, 49 Newspapers, 73 Non-fiction by foreign authors, 11 works by foreign authors, 14–16 Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), 33, 81–82 Novaya Gazeta, 107 Oddities, 5 Oil crises, 32 Ordinary talk interactions, 118 Otechestvenniye Zapiski, 98 P-rated programs, 86n1 Participation, 28 Paz e Terra, 18–21 Perceived advertisements, 73 Photocopying, 4 Photograph, 4 Political bias in media, 106–108 Political capture, 50, 54–55 intersectional forms of economic and political capture, 56–57 intersectional forms of political and bureaucratic capture, 57– Political economy of media, 3 Political leadership, 107 Political management in Russia, 95–96 Political practices, 118 Politicization, 118 Politics, 119 focus group communication on, 123–126 Post-development theorists, 26 Post-war economic boom, 72 Postcolonial development process, 29 Poverty reduction, 24 strategy, 29 Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility, 34 Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), 35 Power being central, 29 Press freedoms, 97 Printing, 4 Productivity Commission, 75 Public Entertainment Censorship Division, 14 Public opinion in Russia, 96 Putin, Vladimir, 102 authoritarian tradition under, 102–104 Quality of mass information, 94–95 Quantifiable objectives, 83–84 Questioning prejudices, 120 Quick Service Restaurant Industry (QSRI), 79 Radio, 4, 31 Recognition of crimes, 21 Regional Radio-communication Conference (RRC-06), 34 Regulating unhealthy food advertising Advertising Code of Ethics, 72 BUGA-UP movement, 73–74 efficacy of self-regulation, 82–85 human wellbeing, 75 industry self-regulation of food ads and industry initiatives, 76–82 Reporters, 49 Research democratic practices casual interactions, 119 focus group as communicative and conflictive situation, 120–123 focus group communication on politics, 123–126 media material in group’s discussion, 126–129 politicization, 118 reflections for further analysis, 129–130 Research methods, 120 Responsible Marketing to Children Initiative (RMMCI), 79 Retaliation, 58–59 Rodney, Walter, 24 Rudd Government, 75 Russian media, 94–95 authoritarian tradition prior to 1917, 95–97 authoritarian tradition under Putin, 102–104 early Russian publications, 97–98 Gorbachev and beyond, 101–102 journalistic attitude toward west, 100–101 law, 97–98 media under communist influence, 99–100 media’s economic trends, 104–106 political bias in media, 106–108 post-reform years, 98–99 Ukraine, 108–110 Russian television, 108 Russkiy Vestnik, 98 Sabiá, 18–20 Saga, 18–20 Sankt-Peterburgskiye vedomosti, 106 Sartre, Jean Paul, 20 Secularization, 25 Self-regulation, efficacy of, 82–85 Self-Regulation of Broadcasting, 74 Self-regulatory codes, 84 Semi-structured qualitative interview approach, 46 Shadow media, 52 Shenton, 24 Social control, 51 Social media, 51 Social recognition, 120 Societal capture, 51, 60–61 Sovershenno Sekretno, 107 Soviet journalists, 101 Soviet political system, 100 Sovremennik, 98 Stigmatizations, 120 Stimulating disidentifications, 120 Structural adjustment programmes (SAPs), 32 Subversive propaganda, 13 Tape recorder, 4 Technical language, 1–2 Technology, 4 Telegraph, 4 Television, 4, 72 Television Malawi (TVM), 33 Trade, 2 Trade Practices Act (1974), 73 Transition period, 102 Transmission of ideologies, 29 Turnbull Coalition Government, 81–82 Ukraine, 108–110 Unhealthy food, 82–83 advertising, 83 and drinks manufacturers, 84 United Democratic Front Party (UDF), 33 United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 26, 48 United States Agency for International Development (USAID), 26 Universities’ Mission to Central Africa (UMCA), 31 Urbanization, 4, 7 Value structures, 51 Vedomosti, 97 Vesti Nedeli, 109 Violence, 21 Voluntary self-regulation system, 75 Western democracies, 25, 27 Westernization, 7 World Bank (WB), 26 World Health Organization (WHO), 76 World Trade Organization (WTO), 26 Zavtra, 107 Zero Deficit Budget, 35, 37 Book Chapters Prelims Overlapping Communicative Meshes: Plural Perspectives on Media and Development Chapter 1: Foreign Authors, National Bans: Books and Censorship in Brazil (1964–1985) Chapter 2: Manufacturing the Liberal Media Model Through Developmentality in Malawi Chapter 3: Toward a Framework for Studying Democratic Media Development and “Media Capture”: The Iraqi Kurdistan Case Chapter 4: Regulating Unhealthy Food Advertising to Children under Neoliberalism: An Australian Perspective Chapter 5: How Russian Media Helped Develop the Authoritarian Tradition: Its Historical Legacy for Today Chapter 6: How to Capture the Political in Everyday Conversation? Focus Groups as a Method to Research Democratic Practices in Daily Life Index
Referência(s)