Media and power in Southeast Asia / Cherian George, Gayathry Venkiteswaran.

George, Cherian
Call Number
302.23/0959
Author
George, Cherian, author.
Title
Media and power in Southeast Asia / Cherian George, Gayathry Venkiteswaran.
Physical Description
1 online resource (71 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Series
Elements in politics and society in Southeast Asia, 2515-2998
Notes
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 13 Aug 2019).
Summary
This study of Southeast Asian media and politics explores issues of global relevance pertaining to journalism's relationship with political power. It argues that the development of free, independent, and plural media has been complicated by trends towards commercialisation, digital platforms, and identity-based politics. These forces interact with state power in complex ways, opening up political space and pluralising discourse, but without necessarily producing structural change. The Element has sections on the democratic transitions of Indonesia, Myanmar and Malaysia; authoritarian resilience in Singapore; media ownership patterns in non-communist Southeast Asia; intolerance in Indonesia and Myanmar; and digital disruptions in Vietnam and Malaysia.
Added Author
Venkiteswaran, Gayathry, author.
Subject
Mass media policy Southeast Asia.
Mass media Political aspects Southeast Asia.
Mass media Censorship Southeast Asia.
Multimedia
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Summary
This study of Southeast Asian media and politics explores issues of global relevance pertaining to journalism's relationship with political power. It argues that the development of free, independent, and plural media has been complicated by trends towards commercialisation, digital platforms, and identity-based politics. These forces interact with state power in complex ways, opening up political space and pluralising discourse, but without necessarily producing structural change. The Element has sections on the democratic transitions of Indonesia, Myanmar and Malaysia; authoritarian resilience in Singapore; media ownership patterns in non-communist Southeast Asia; intolerance in Indonesia and Myanmar; and digital disruptions in Vietnam and Malaysia.
Notes
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 13 Aug 2019).
Subject
Mass media policy Southeast Asia.
Mass media Political aspects Southeast Asia.
Mass media Censorship Southeast Asia.
Multimedia