NOAM, E., & The International Media Concentration Collaboration, including BADILLO, P.-Y., BOURGEOIS, D., HAYASHI, K., LESOURD, J.B., & NAKAMURA, K. (Eds)
Who Owns the World’s Media ? Media Concentration and Ownership around the World
Mis à jour le 21 avril 2016

Direction d’un ouvrage (DO)

NOAM, E., & The International Media Concentration Collaboration, including BADILLO, P.-Y., BOURGEOIS, D., HAYASHI, K., LESOURD, J.B., & NAKAMURA, K. (Eds) (2016). Who Owns the World’s Media ? Media Concentration and Ownership around the World. New-York, Etats-Unis : Oxford University Press, 1440 pp. isbn:9780199987238 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199987238.001.0001  
Membre(s) IRSIC impliqué(s) :
 
Résumé :

Media concentration has been an issue around the world. To some observers the power of large corporations has never been higher. To others, the Internet has brought openness and diversity. What perspective is correct ? The answer has significant implications for politics, business, culture, regulation, and innovation. It addresses a highly contentious subject of public debate in many countries around the world. In this discussion, one side fears the emergence of media empires that can sway public opinion and endanger democracy. The other side believes the Internet has opened media to unprecedented diversity and worries about excessive regulation by government. Strong opinions and policy advocates abound on each side, yet a lack of quantitative research across time, media industries, and countries undermines these positions. This book moves beyond the rhetoric of free media and free markets to provide a dispassionate and data-driven analysis of global media ownership trends and their drivers. The book covers thirteen media industries, including television, newspapers, book publishing, film, search engines, ISPs, wireless telecommunication, and others across a 10- to 25-year period in thirty countries. After examining these countries, this book offers comparisons and analysis across industries, regions, companies, and development levels. It calculates overall national concentration trends beyond specific media industries, the market share of individual companies in the overall national media sector, and the size and trends of transnational companies in overall global media.


Mots-clés :

media, Internet, free markets, television, newspapers, search engines, media concentration, media conglomerates, books, radio, TV, film, telecom, ISPs, China, private investment funds, Google, media regulation