ABSTRACT

This highly topical book exposes the tensions between state policies of broadcasting regulation and practices of civil society in the Asian region which is struggling with its incorporation into a new globalised, electronic information and entertainment world. Kitley critically compares Western principles of broadcasting, civil society and cultural regulation with alternative 'Asian' practices of regulation and organisation. Over the past forty years Asian states have used television as a normative cultural force in nation building, but more recently many states have deregulated their television sectors and introduced national commercial and international satellite services. As Asian states wrestle with a perceived loss of cultural control and identity through deregulation, this book considers their viewpoints and the question of whether the television public sphere offers space for the representation of popular sovereignty, and transversal concerns about human rights, press freedom, gender, environmental and world trade issues.

part |2 pages

Part I Overview

chapter |32 pages

Introduction

First principles – television, regulation and transversal civil society in Asia

chapter |4 pages

Profiles

National television systems in Asia and Australia

part |2 pages

Part II Regulation and transversal civil society in Southeast Asia

chapter |15 pages

The subject of regulation

chapter 3|10 pages

Civil society in charge?

Television and the public sphere in Indonesia after Reformasi

chapter |8 pages

The reform period of the late 1990s

chapter 4|16 pages

Civic or civil contingencies?: regulating television and society in

Regulating television and society in Singapore

chapter 5|1 pages

Out of reach

Television, the public sphere and civil society in the Philippines

chapter |8 pages

Regulation of content

part |2 pages

Part III Regulation and transversal civil society in Northeast Asia

chapter |2 pages

New regulations for new times

chapter |3 pages

Civil society and public spheres

chapter 8|8 pages

Television in the formation of civil society: the role of a non- controversial public space in Hong Kong

The role of a non-controversial public space in Hong Kong

chapter 9|9 pages

Sliding back the screens

Civil society and the erosion of bureaucratic control of television in Japan

chapter 10|17 pages

Civil society as the fifth estate

Civil society, media reform and democracy in Korea

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

part |2 pages

PART IV Beyond the nation: satellite television

chapter 11|12 pages

National sovereignty in an age of transnational television

An endnote on media regulation and civil society in Asia