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Advocacy Groups and the Entertainment Industry

Editat de Michael Suman, Gabriel Rossman
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 iun 2000 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Michael Suman has brought together wide-ranging viewpoints of media advocates, media lawyers, academics, and entertainment industry representatives who examine the important public policy issue of how advocacy groups affect the entertainment industry.In the first part of the book, representatives from media advocacy groups, including Action for Children's Television and Population Communications International, look at their efforts to utilize the media for policy purposes. In the second part, attorneys specializing in communications look at the ways advocacy groups have been aided as well as hindered by changes in the laws and public policy. Changes in advocacy groups as well as the entertainment industry in general are examined by various scholars in the third section. Representatives of the entertainment industry look at the impact of advocacy groups in the fourth section of the book. Scholars as well as public policy makers and those involved in entertainment oversight will find this a provocative analysis.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780275968854
ISBN-10: 0275968855
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

MICHAEL SUMAN is Research Director of the UCLA Center for Communication Policy. He has served as project coordinator of the Center's television violence monitoring project and has coauthored several nationwide surveys. Among Professor Suman's earlier publications is Religion and Prime Time Television (Praeger, 1997).GABRIEL ROSSMAN formerly researcher at the UCLA Center for Communication Policy, where he coauthored the Center's panel survey on the social impact of the Internet. He is currently a graduate student in the Princeton University Department of sociology where he studies the sociology of culture.

Cuprins

IntroductionArticles by AdvocatesThe Harvard Alcohol Project: Promoting the "Designated Driver" by Jay A. WinstenPrinciples for Effective Advocacy from the Founder of Action for Children's Television by Peggy CharrenUsing Soap Operas to Confront the World's Population Problem by Irwin Sonny FoxA Catholic Look at the Entertainment Industry by William A. DonohueThe Proactive Strategy of GLAAD by William Horn, as interviewed by Gabriel RossmanStrategies of the Media Action Network for Asian Americans by Guy AokiHow Church Advocacy Groups Fostered the Golden Age of Hollywood by Ted BaehrArticles by LawyersInfluencing Media Content Through the Legal System: A Less Than Perfect Solution for Advocacy Groups by Rex S. Heinke and Michelle H. TremainPublic Policy Advocacy: Truant Independent Producers in a Federal City Fixated on a "Values Agenda" by Mickey R. GardnerArticles by AcademicsGatekeeping in the Neo-Network Era by Michael CurtinWhat Is an Advocacy Group, Anyway? by Thomas StreeterHolistic and Cooperative Advocacy Groups: Ideal-Typical Analysis by Gabriel RossmanInterest Groups and Public Debate by Michael SumanAdvocacy Groups in the Age of Audience Fragmentation: Thoughts on a New Strategy by Robert PekurnyArticles by Industry RepresentativesAdvocacy Groups Confront CBS: Problems or Opportunities? by Carol AltieriDealing with Advocacy Groups at ABC by Alfred R. SchneiderTelevision and Pressure Groups: Balancing the Bland by Lionel ChetwyndEpilogueA Millenarian View of Artists and Audiences by Nicholas JohnsonSelected BibliographyIndex