Pacific Journalism Review (Sep 2004)

Media ownership policies: Pressures for change and implications

  • Steven Barnett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v10i2.801
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2

Abstract

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We are witnessing a wholesale restructuring of media ownership statutes throughout the world. It is difficult to think of a single developed or developing country which over the last 10 years has not introduced at least one change – and in many cases more – in its media ownership regimes. The direction is almost entirely one-way: towards a more liberal and deregulated environment which allows for more conglomeration of media companies, greater flexibility in foreign ownership, and fewer restrictions on ownership across different media. I want to address two important aspects of this worldwide phenomenon: first, why it is happening and the main forces driving these changes; and second, the implications for a free press, for diversity, and for journalism.

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