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Towards Realistic Communication if:r::Ends and ideas compiled and analysed John A.R. Lee Unesco

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Page 1: Towards realistic communication policies: recent trends and ideas

Towards Realistic Communication

if:r::Ends and ideas compiled and analysed John A.R. Lee

Unesco

Page 2: Towards realistic communication policies: recent trends and ideas

ISBN 92-3-1 O1 295-9 French Edition 92-3-201295-2 Spanish Edition 92-3-301295-6

Published by The Unesco Press 7, Place de Fontenoy, 75700 Paris

Composed and printed in the workshops of Unesco

OUnesco 1976 Printed in France

Page 3: Towards realistic communication policies: recent trends and ideas

Preface

In the future the 19701s may well be remembered as the "communication decade". Since 1969 it seems that throughout the world there has been a rethinkingof many issues concerning the present and the future development of the communication media and of the rôle which communicationplays in society.

From the Unesco point of view the communi- cation decade may well have started in Montreal in 1969 when a meeting of experts on communica- tion in society was convened. Out of that meeting has grown a whole new Unesco programme which at each stage has been a response to thepriorities of the Member States which compose the Organi- zation, but at the same time has tried to be future- oriented so that it can take into account the com- munication problems which will become key issues in years to come.

The Montreal meeting pointed towards the need for more and better communication research. It also stressed that this research should be prob- lem solving and policy oriented. At that time, in 1969, few people were talking about communication policies. In 1975 the subject was being much more widely discussed and it was in that year half way through the "communication decade", that it was de- cided to convene, in 1976, the first Intergovernmental Conference on Communication Policies. This Con- ference will bring together the ministers responsible for communication in the various countries of Latin America and the Caribbean to "exchange experìence on communication systems in relation to economic and social development and to con- sider the establishment, at the national and re- gional levels of governmental, administrative, technical, research and training infrastructures for the formulation, implementation and evalua- tion of communication policies". (1)

of ideas which have, between these two events, contributed to changing a theoretical approach into an international action programme. It is directed to two related audiences, Firstly, to

This book attempts to systematize the wealth

the students of communication who, more and more in their studies, have to establish mean- ingful relationships between the social and cul- tural functions of communication media, the possibilities and limitations of communication technology and the ethical and legal questions which arise from the new consideration of the relationship between these two. Contemporary communication students must also understand the ways in which communication research can contribute to policy formulation and how the new science of communication planning can present alternative approaches to developing functional systems. munication policies, and thus, it is also to the policy- makers themselves that this book is di- rected. shape, for years to come, the communication structures within their various societies. Too often these decision- makers lack the necessary information and a systematic basis upon which to make their choices of option and action.

number of documents, which have both contri- buted to and been the outcome of Unesco meet- ings and technical assistance projects and from many other sources of ideas and expertise. How- ever, his contribution has been more than that of a commler. His task. has been to bring together, in a logical sequence, and analyse the work and thoughts of many people who over the years, have contributed their viewpoints based on very dif- ferent ideologies and interests. He has also con- tributed his own original thinking based upon his wide and deep knowledge of the whole communi- cation policy field. Thus the opinions and argu- ments expressed do not necessarily completely reflect the view of Unesco, but the Organization considers that this crystallization of the new think- ing is both important and opportune.

(1) Unesco document 18 C/5. Draft Programme

All these things are involved in com-

They have to decide on issues which may

Dr. Lee has compiled this book from a great

and Budget for 1975-1976, para. 4057.

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Table of contents

Page

PREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

CHAPTER I THE FUNCTIONS OF COMMUNICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Communication in society and the flow of communication . . . . . . . . 11 Communication and information needs of society . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

CHAPTER II

CHAPTER III

CHAPTER IV

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Some relevant international communications questions . . . . . . . . . 16 The international flow of communication: news flow . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Satellite communication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Guiding principles on the use of satellite broadcasting . . . . . . . . . . 21 Fundamental principles concerning the rôle of the mass media . . . . . . 22

COMMUNICATION RESEARCH . INFORMING THE POLICY-MAKERS . . . 24

Major relevant questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Communication research . past and present . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 A new orientation ?6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Research proposals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Exchange and use of information on research . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

COMMUNICATION POLICIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

Communication policies . dimensions and concerns . . . . . . . . . . 33 Participation in communication policy formulation . who is involved? 36 . . .

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Page

CHAPTER V FROM POLICIES TO PLANNING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

Strategic and operational planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 The planning process . the need for data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 The economics and finance of communication services . economic evaluation of communication systems . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

Bases of decision-making . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46

Planning integrated media systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Systems management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50

Manpower planning- the need for professional mediators . . . . . . . . 52 Technology transfer. external assistance and mutual co-operation . . . . 53

CHAPTER VI CONCLUSION: COMMUNICATION POLICIES AND UNESCO'S P R O G R A M M E BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . 55

BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

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Introduction

Individual improvement, social organization and growth demand communication, since all beings are dependent on communication with their kind. Two forces are at work here: one that pushes man to communicate and unite with his kind to form a society, and another which induces a thus formed society to set up, for its own operation and its self expression, ever more perfect communication methods, leading to an attempt to create constantly improved social structures.

For thousands of years, man originally re- lied on primitive, but in those times socially ap- propriate, forms of communication. Around the forest path, the road and river, there successively appeared the frameworks of those methods of com- munication both available at a given time and able to satisfy social needs. signal fire on the hill, the courier on foot or horse- back, the dispatches sent by coach or boat, com- munication developed.

whatever sort - grew and crumbled, in rhythm with the evolution of more powerful and more ef- fective means of communication. A century ago, the railroad and the telegraph were extended simul- taneously in North America westward and in Europe and Asia eastward, building in their wake the super powers of our time.

popular around 1840, there has been a steady stream of invention in longer distance and more rapid communication. ing seventy per cent of our earth's surface - the telegraph cable alone held forth until about 1927, when voice transmission became possible for the first time through radio. next followed.

There is an actual explosion about us of communication pos- sibilities, of which w e are often enough but quiet witnesses, as if the shock wave has not yet reached us. The experts have been predicting that the

Progressing from the

Civilizations, empires and institutions - of

Since Morse Code made telegraphy usable and

Across the oceans - cover-

Radar and television

Ours is an age of communication.

evolving and new communication technology will affect and change life styles as radically as the motorcar did in the 1920s and the industrial rev- olution earlier. As we ponder the effect of this revolution on ourselves and on future generations, we are only dimly beginning to perceive the ex- tent to which our lives are shaped by these com- munication media that give us our images of this planet - and beyond.

Already the following communication techno- logical improvements are upon us: the telegraph to the teleprinter and the telex; the telephone and various related telephonic ser- vices from the manual to the fully automatic subscriber;

pioneering application of Marconi, to cater for diverse services, now stretching out beyond the ionosphere to outer space;

man's capability of launching satellites to the geo- stationary orbit of outer space some 36,000 kilometres from the earth, including communi- cation satellites which have the capacity for handling simultaneously thousands of messages;

other wide- band trans m is s ion and tel edi s t ri bu t io n through the advent of cable systems;

the application of computer technology to tele- communications;

sound and picture transmission by wave guides, optical fibres or laser;

video- recording facilities; and digital television; to list some of the more important and well-known aspects of this recent rapid and significant com- munication technological development.

cerned and involved in these matters, for the proximate future? cation channels into the home: twenty, forty or eighty, by coaxial cable, or, by the perfecting of fibre optics, hundreds and even thousands. Home information centres will be capable of

the use of the radio spectrum, starting from the

And what is predicted, by those most con-

There will be more communi-

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printing out daily newspapers even while screen- ing the latest movie or television re- run; this will be watched not on a picture tube but on a wall- sized screen creating third dimensional illusion; it can provide "narrowcasting" aimed especially at oneself or one's neighbours or interest group; it can also provide "interactive capacity", pro- viding the opportunity to talk back or at least send back a signal of some sort; connected to the com- puter, it can bring libraries into the home, and a communication dish on the roof can pick up tele- casts direct from around the globe.

A major promise of the more optimistic futurologists is that there will no longer be com- munication scarcity but a period of abundance, as a vast flowering of services is foreseen: social - entire channels devoted €o universities without walls and round- the- clock delivery of health ser- vices; civic - fire and police service, electronic mail delivery; political - town meetings from the home, instant plebiscites, the world turned into a truly "Greek market place" of democracy; and economic - shopping from home, business and cultural conferences by picturephone, relief for congested transportation systems, There will al- so be demographic benefits, where the efficacious use of the new communications can provide incen- tive for families and businesses to quit huddling together in crowded megalopolises and to spread themselves more throughout the vast and more un- populated parts of the planet.

communication ramifications of this are the fol- lowing. People will be increasingly called upon to make more critical assessments, to take personal views upon more and more issues, and to try to understand the affairs and complexities of more peoples in other regions of the earth.

scarcity to one of growing abundance, our thinking, reasoning and communication structures are still too confined and reflecting the times of scarcity. Our ideas, psychological make-up, mentality and actions must change. Too little has still changed in our individual behaviour since those times when our ancestors communicated by fire or smoke. Mass communication still appears to be miracu- lous, rare and expensive, with the instruments external to ourselves rather than internal to our senses. A new philosophy and a new approach to communications issues leading to consideration of the reshaping of national and international struc- tures must begin in earnest, if we are to reap the many benefits of this communication cornucopia.

A rapidly growing world literature testifies to the fact that our post-industrial revolution is characterized by the emergence of "knowledge" industries and information- based society. Em- phasis is moving from the production and distri- bution of material goods towards the assembly and distribution of information.

Some of the corresponding non- technological

Having gone from a period of communications

With the "right to communicate" and "right to receive communication", basic socio- political rights which belong to every individual, which en- tail the right of access of all individuals to the in- formation system, existing disparities in access will be even less desirable in a society which de- pends on a wide range of information services. The counterpart to these basic human rights is "the right to privacy", wherein implications in all of the technological developments are enormous.

in the volume of information being made available might actually result in even less effective infor- mation reaching the public. The reaction could reflect an "information overload", with individuals, regions and nations over- producing and leaving no one at the receiving end of such a communica- tion system.

Technology is directing mass communication in two opposite paths. One direction includes in- creasing centralization, passivity, often frustra- tion for the receivers and concentration of the power of a few to reach the many, where the com- munication is uni- directional, and too often can only mean political and commercial information. On the other hand, a genuine implication of the new technology is that it portends the end of a nationally- closed society, Teledistribution, video- cassettes, etc., open the opportunity for choice and comparison by each individual, and offer man a tool of individual communication and a new age of true free circulation of "the message".

If today, people are more difficult to govern, it may also be because the instruments, policies, plans and structures of communication no longer correspond - as well as they could - to the present- day world and its technological and social progress.

The underdevelopment of both national and international communication may be seen to be an underlying cause of general underdevelopment. And, because communication is a fundamental so- cial process underlying any social change that a developing country wants to make, and is neces- sarily a part of any plan to improve human life in any culture, the development of the communica- tion sector becomes imperative,

Everywhere, in Latin America, Africa and Asia, we witness today the emergence of new countries which were often previously deprived of an adequate communication system; countries where until recently, communication existed best along the colonial channels of command in a north- south direction. Akin to an organism lacking a nervous system, these countries too often had sel- dom more than antique aeroplanes and inadequate radio telecommunications systems to link the dif- ferent provinces of a not yet mobilized national body. At the same time, the potential of existing, yet so far unused, communication methods and technologies - for both developing and developed

It is possible also that a continual increase

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countries - is of the same magnitude as the neu- rons of our brain which (for reasons still to be discovered) w e do not yet use more than partially.(

velopment in mass communication has extended and enhanced the world-wide penetration and im- pact of ideas and information, it has served also to further the social and collective aspects of freedom of information. Indeed, since ideas ex- pressed in words and in live images can now girdle the earth instantaneously, freedom of information has become a consideration of a definitely inter- national character. Consequently, the protection of the right to impact and to receive information has become a basic concern to all, including - certainly - governments acting individually in the interest of their respective peoples or jointlyin the interest of all, and to each of us, wherever or how- ever w e live.

Radio, television and the printed word are factors of wide distribution and crucial importance in modern society. In present-day society all in- dividuals come under the influence of mass media, and in fact to a very great extent, normally about a third of our waking time is spent in their com- pany. audience of mass media, these media have come to form gigantic systems in certain developed so- cieties. While the circulation of newspapers and magazines and the rating figures of radio and TV audiences assume greater importance, a basic purpose of communication - the transmission of information and experiences to the audience - struggles for its existence. (2)

Responsibility for the policies, operations and output of the mass media is assigned, as- sumed and exercised in different ways in different countries. media are operated as organs of the State. others private commercial companies - with some being economically multi- corporations in every sense - or independent public corporations created by the State operate this or that medium.

The machinery of modern mass communica- tion is linked by complex and intricate ties to the economic and political structure, and this integra- tion of mass communication into the other institu- tions of society has increased during the last few decades, as the part played (where applicable) by advertising in maintaining the media has grown and as the control of the media has become con- centrated in fewer and fewer hands.

content in isolation from socio- political- economical structures. W e should also be careful not toover- differentiate between the establishment (including the government and the private sector) and the media system. researcher James Halloran has said:

To the extent that every new technological de-

And with the ever-increasing size of the

In some countries all or some of the In

Thus we must not view the media and their

As British mass communication

"From time to time we may need to put the media under the microscope, but when we do this we should be careful to maintain thewider perspective. Always we are studying the mass communication process, the operation of the media in society. munication process should be seen in the wider economic, technological settings. Our present ignorance about the impact of the mass media is partly due to the refusal of researchers to accept this. "( 3)

If mass communications are as an integral organ of the social body, it is not sufficient to look at what happens within the media and only try to change their policies, since such of their deter- mining forces operate from outside, through other ins t itutio na1 structure s.

At the same time, the mass media should not be viewed as 100 per cent predetermined, either. There is always more or less scope for freedom to change the practices within the media. Some- thing can be done to increase democracy in the media, and we must work constantly to this aim. But those who want to limit their effort inchang- ing the world only within the media are unrealis- tic in their analysis and policy.

The improvement of national and interna- tional communications together with the accelera- tion of technological, economic and social devel- opment have placed the mass media in a new situa- tion, in which their function and working criteria must be re-evaluated. This is particularly so in the case of television which at birth took over the traditions shaped by the press, film and radio, but which has turned out to be in many respects more effective than its predecessors.

It is becoming increasingly obvious that an attempt at maximal true information cannot be socially neutral , but nec es s ar ily b ecom es 'I partial". While true information is often thought to be ''neu- tral" or ''pure'', in reality connexions between the content of information and its implications for practical action in social and political life cannot be distinguished one from the other, for all infor- mation either supports the status quo or promotes new approaches to reality (innovation).

All aspects of the mass com-

New

(1) Jean dfArcy "Communication as a right. Un- frocking the magicians", Intermedia, Inter- national Broadcast Institute, No. 5, 1974, p. 2. Nordenstreng, Informational Mass Communi- cation, Tammi, Helsinki, 1973, p. 178. James D. Halloran. "What do we need to know? Are we going to be able to find out? Paper presented at the International Sympo- sium on Communication: Technology, Impact and Policy, Annenberg School of Communica- tions, University of Pennsylvania, Philadel- phia, 23-25 March 1972, p. 11.

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information by definition involves reorientation in outlook and hence initiation to action. Crucial in the principles of informational communication policy is the goal of using the mass media for transmitting information about concrete reality, that is accumulating concrete evidence on the ob- jective world in the consciousness of a recipient. The informational principles of selection of mes- sages for mass communication are derived from the concern for the truthful reflection of objective reality, not from the concern only for the "balance" of all kinds of social interests - justified andnon- justified.

Considering the central significance of the organizational forms in planning and executing communication policies during the forthcoming era of the new media technology, all nationaland international experience in the broad field of com- munication policy should be carefully analysed and evaluated. In this evaluation due concern should be focused on the fact that lasting inter- national understanding and cultural CO- operation can only be generated by national, ultimately local, activity, based on democratic participa- tion in the framework of the cultural and politi- cal autonomy of all nation States, large and small alike.

The implementation of communication poli- cies and practices requires joint action among those involved in the social, economic, scienti- fic, educational and foreign affairs of each coun- try. power set up to control the media. They can be successful only in constant contact and consulta- tion with the communicators and the citizens whose direct participation in the formulation and imple- mentation of communication policies and plans is both essential and vital. tively frustrate and distort the real and best flow of communication than lack of respect for the na- ture of communication itself and the social need to communicate.

In less developed countries, a principal task is to assure greater participation of the people in economic and national affairs, to increase their skills and knowledge, to weld them together into nationhood, and to assist them in finding their cultural and personal identity. Without communi- cation, without the maximum use of the modern

Their rôle is not to be conceived as a super-

Nothing will more effec-

mass media in conjunction with more traditional ways of social communication,there is less hope that such urgent goals may be reached in area- sonable time. Today, the decision- makers and the citizens of these countries cannot but payclose attention to the rôle which communication currently plays in society, and explore how communication may best contribute to all aspects of human and national development.

In more developed countries, communication technology is today upsetting many existing institutions. Potentially, it makes it possible for more and more citizens to ben-efit, or suffer, from cheap and plentiful opportunities to choose what he or she would like to see, hear or read, and to ex- press views to others. But it also threatens older and more traditional social values and ways of life.

All countries, developing and developed, are involved in far- reaching debates and practical issues, which not only affect the future means of communication but the nature of society itself. Policy- makers are increasingly aware that, in the allocation of natural and social resources, future-oriented policies can no longer afford to ignore the communication dimension.

Failure to take a total view of communica- tion, to examine present and future communication policies and to translate these policies, where ap- propriate, into plans can easily lead to ill- afforded wastage. Because communication is so obviously pervasive, it is all too commonly accepted that effective communication occurs spontaneously and necessarily. In fact, however, the process of hu- man communication in modern society can break down because it is now so dependent on many tech- nical, material, legal and organizational factors which derive from public policies and call for di- rect public concern and participation.

Both societies and the individual need greater consistency between the policies and activities of various communication sub- systems and planning which can allow for diversity. Inevitable tensions and contradictions arise. These are often easier to reconcile in an affluent society with more alter- native channels for communication and education. Under the restraints of scarce resources - material and human - however, coherent communication policies assume a particular importance.

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Chapter 1

The functions of communication

Communication in societv and the flow of com munication

Communication is generally understood as the processes of transport and transmission between places and people. To planning authorities, this normally meant the transport of goods and people by land, water and air, and the transmission of messages through telecommunications. This nar- row concept, however, does not fit the notion of "communication in society", where the particular concern is with the information capacity required by society to operate 'effectively, and with the flow of communication throughout the social fabric.

Social communication involves both inter- personal contact and "mediated" communication in which information is carried by technical facili- ties or oth-a5rt"edkr+es;- S-o-csfahamunicz- tion may take place spontaneously among individuals, or it may be organized and conducted through in- stitutional channels. media of mass communication, but also other in- stitutions designed for the transmission of infor- mation - political agents, extension services, cul- tural animators, educators, social services. They may be operated by the State - government, public institutions, administrations at the national and local level, or at the non- governmental level - private enterprises, CO- operatives, associations, etc. They may be fully or partially financed by commercial revenue or rely on public funds, li- cence fees and other resources.

ciety depends partly on its tele- communication infrastructure. This has been, generally, the primary preoccupation of those responsible for developing and operating communication networks. Based on the notion that such networks should be self- financing, if not profit- making, there has been, however, a tendency to pay less attention to the needs of those fields of social communica- tion which are of equal public concern, but less

These include not only the

The information capacity available to any so-

likely to be remunerative in monetary terms. Equally, an understanding and organization

of modern communication must go beyond the outdated vertical model, the one- way concept of flow, for no genuine communication system can ever be complete without some form of response mechanism. Communication flow should be seen as a multilateral process, in which not only one can communicate to many, but also one to one, and many to one or many to many. Unless people can respond to the information they are receiving and make known their points of view, there is simply reinforcement of the pgssive one- way sys- tem which we now too often have. It is not enough just to build in some feedback into the present communication system.

Ideally - and technically - it is becoming mureamd-more possible for an individual to be able to convey to others precise questions and immediate problems which arise out of his oc- cupation, his familylife or his intellectual curi- osity, and he should be able to receive answers to these through an appropriate communication channel. Governments communicate regularly with their people, but the people also seek and should have regular communication with govern- ments, because this is true democracy in the twentieth century.

Communication systems should be viewed not as "social overheads" to be ignored or tolerated, but as a basic need and right of human society. Rather than looking at information as a disposable luxury product, and the audience as a Ilconsumer" and just a "receiver", it becomes more andmore important to approach both policy formulation and planning for communication in a positive manner, wherein the productive potential of com- munication within the socio- economic structure of society is of prime consideration.

contradictory functions of communication is a prerequisite for a more precise analysis by

Consciousness of the overall and sometimes

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policy- makers of the potentially positive or nega- tive effects which may be achieved through a de- liberate and more functional use of communica- tion. Communication policies and planning will therefore be guided by the determination by each country of the social functions which communi- cation media should fulfil.

Generally, the main social functions, in any society, for communication media are as followsil)

Information - Everyone has to make decisions, day after day, and is involved in responsibilities which go far beyond the immediate possibilities of his personal observation and contact. Whether he is a young man on the farm or a high civil ser- vant, he requires l'information'' on what is going on around him, to what he may look forward in the future. gers and indications of rewarding opportunities. The basic task of communication media is to in- form him, to help him keep abreast of a rapidly changing world in which events on one side of the globe may have repercussions right at home. To fulfil their function of bringing messages, signal- ling dangers and revealing conditions - the surveil- lance of the environment - the media require ac- cess to the kind of information which vitally af- fects the existence of individuals in society, while the individual in turn should demand access to this information through the communication media.

Thus, a primary rôle of the media shouldbe one of translation, to make information obtained from specialized sources (meteorologists, statis- ticians, scientific researchers, etc. ) accessible and understandable to the point where it is useful.

Social participation - In this context, primary emphasis must be placed on the promotion, through the media, of basic common norms and values, to be understood and adopted.

To function properly, society requires devel- opment of a social consciousness based on aware- ness and application of these norms, not only by present members, but also by newcomers, be they children or immigrants. Socialization through adoption of common values is seen as a function of the media. phasis on the need for diversity and personal choice, though they are no less concerned about preservation of the social bond.

Preservation and innovation - The mediamay often be asked to assist in the preservation of traditions and cultures, to recall the accomplish- ments and values of the past and thus enhancena- tional identity and social confidence. But society needs innovation to grow. It is equally the rôle of the media to present new ideas and values as alternatives.

Cultural functions - The media are a way of cultural expression in their own right and vehicles for the transmission of other cultural

He seeks warning about imminent dan-

Others place greater em-

forms. Frequently, they are the only type of cultural communication which is accessible to the mass of the people. Their social function is therefore one of enhancing traditional cultures and opening the mind to new forms and styles, of linking the national past with the worldwide dimensions of the culture of man.

Entertainment and recreation assume par- ticular significance in this context, as in the serious content of the media. In the context of social needs, relaxation, entertainment, laughter and enjoyment can be seen to have positive and productive functions. The issue is not between entertainment and seriousness; it is between "meaningfulness" and "triviality".

Government - Government cannot function without communication with the citizens at large and with its own administrative components at the central and local levels. tial social functions of communication is to pro- vide the channels for a continuous flow of infor- mation, instruction, opinion and active involve- ment from government to the people and back, and, among the different government services.

Management - Management, whether of ad- ministration or of industrial and commercial enterprises, requires also a constant flow of in- formation to orient its operation toward the broader social scene, to co-ordinate its action, and to communicate continuously with its own staff. A modern complex society of industrial- ization and post- industrialization, in which pub- lic administrations play an ever-increasingrôle, cannot function without communication systems. Management of industry, agriculture and educa- tion, and social services are dependent on con- certed action by dispersed officials throughout the land. the machinery going.

vital function in economic affairs. are economic enterprises in their own right, and may act as stimulants in agriculture and commerce, manpower training and vocational orientation. The productive impact of communication through the information which is disseminated and the impact of its commercial enterprise, are essen- tial social functions of communication, which are not confined to those circuits directly built into economic enterprises.

Education - Unesco's 1971 International Commission on the Development of Education report in their book(2) that every individual must

One of the essen-

Communication is essential to keep

Economic affairs - Communication plays a The media

Unesco. ReDort of the Meeting of ExDerts I 1 o

on Communication Policies and Planning, COM/MD/24, Paris, 1 December 1972, p. 7. Unesco, Learningto be, the World of Educa- - tion Today and Tomorrow, Edgar Faure et al, Paris 1972, p. 181.

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be in a position to keep learning throughout his life. keystone of the "learning society". education is not an educational system, but the principle on which the overall organization of a system is founded, and which should accordingly underlie the development of each of its component parts. This Unesco Commission proposed life- long education as the master concept for educa- tional policies in the years to come for both de- veloped and developing countries, for "we remain convinced that the question of life-long education, the decisions to take and the paths to follow in order to achieve it are the crucial issues of our time, in all countries of the world, even in those which have yet to become fully aware of this idea".

Communication media are educative whether designed to be so or not, because people are al- ways learning from and being influenced by them. They provide knowledge, and shape values. Di- rectly applied, they can inculcate specific aptitudes or skills. To the degree that communication sys- tems are given particular educational tasks, they frequently perform functions in areas where for- mal education systems have left a void. Whether deliberately called upon to do so, or simply be- cause of their very existence, communication media are establishing parallel systems of edu- cation for the citizen - during his school educa- tion and especially in life-long education - to whichhe is frequently far more and easilyattached than to formal institutions of instruction, which too often are the components of systems of the past.

munication media should fulfil can also be spelled out very practically in response to such broad questions as:(l)

on human existence be understood and dominated rather than suffered in passive submission? How may the values which guide our action in consump- tion and social affairs, in family relationships and attitudes to work, keep abreast with changes in conditions and social needs?

How can communication help rural develop- ment, city planning, environment, promote social change, disseminate useful knowledge, enhance participation in community and national and inter- national affairs, make the points of view and ex- perience of one group of people known to other citizens and the authorities?

How may conditions of health and family life be improved through communication?

How may different social strata, older and younger generations, different ethnic and racial groups, men and women, better understand each other's preoccupations and aspirations?

How may the culture - or cultures - of a country find new forms of expression through the

The idea of "life-long education" is the Life-long

In addition, the social functions which com-

How may the impact of science and technology

media? on unassimilated foreign cultural products whose value systems tend to be alien and sometimes dis ru ptive ?

How may communication support the objec- tives of economic development as determined by government authorities and by the conditions pre- vailing in key economic sectors? What economic objectives are desirable, and what uneconomic effects of communication should, if possible, be avoided?

How may media of communication best sup- port, extend and transform education, in and out of school, from pre-school child to adult, from formal instruction in institutions to educational self- service and life-long education?

way communication, enhance democratic parti- cipation, insert themselves into the total process of social communication?

How may media cease to be dependent

How may the media foster a process of two-

Communication and information needs of society

Too often, the institutions which influence people's lives are out of reach of the ordinary citizen, and this remoteness means that knowledge of the way these institutions work - including the mass media - does not reach substantial sections of the population. This leads to alienation and pre- vents full participation, individually and com- munally. The whole subject of media freedom is wide open for review. It is no longer a ques- tion of media freedom alone but the basic rights of the citizen both to be informed and to com- municate - which are undergoing today an unpre- cedented challenge.

In 1971, there was a questioning especially of the fate, the rôle in society and the economic future of the media. In 1972, the media became more resigned to accept limitations to the free exchange of information for reasons of State or of certain economic and political determinism. And in 1973 and 1974 it emerged that what is at stake is not only the fate of the. media themselves, but that the very principle of the right of the people to receive diversified, complete and well- balanced information and the new "right to communicate" both need to be fortified. the excuse for the attacks made upon them, the amount of freedom which the media enjoy and manage to defend is a yardstick of the amount of genuine democracy which the people enjoy.

either from the basic or subsistence level or from

In reality, whatever

The need to communicate can be looked at

(I) Unesco, Working Paper for Unesco Meeting of ExDerts on Communication Policies and Planning, COM-72/CONF. 8/3, p. 12, Paris 1972.

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the more complex level of the need to keep abreast of how society works, including the personal im- plications of changing political and economic structures. The relevant question is to what ex- tent do people have problems demanding informa- tion from different sources, and what is the real contribution of the communication media in assist- ing them to solve those problems.

anthropolzgists, etc. , have undertaken what must by now come to many thousands of studies of the structures and life styles of different societies. Very few, however, have been carried out with a "communication optique'' tcj focus attention on the communication behaviour of individuals and groups within the society, their real needs for information to enable them to live their every- day lives, and the "traditional" network patterns through which this information flows.

There is another important viewpoint to this question of the communication needs of society. This looks at the problem from the other direc- tion, to ascertain the communication components in all aspects of national development plans and Programm es. This approach involves a general survey of all sectors of the national development plan, including both the public and private sectors of the economy, and analyses the needs for all forms of communication in order that the plan can be carried out.

Development plans are usually broken down into programmes and projects. These should be examined in detail and the project "support" com- munication needs and requirements noted. From the various parts of the plan, for example, agri- culture, housing, transportation, health, culture, education, industry, etc., could be extracted in quantifiable terms, all requirements and needs for communication measured as broadcasting time, printed pages, paper, film footage, com- munication manpower, institutional structures, network capacities, distribution systems, etc. , which should then be aggregated and compared with the performance of which the present com- munication system is capable. assist in identifying and quantifying the gap be- tween needs and capability and point to areas where priority expansion of the system is re- quired if development tasks are to be effectively performed.

The identification of needs thus becomes a prior concern in the formulation of policies. The work already done or under way in some major communication projects in countries like Sweden, Canada, the Federal Republic of Germany and the U. S. A. , through surveys, research and com- mission- work indicates that this phase alone con- stitutes a major challenge for research, as well as management structures, as would any policy and planning that ultimately have to result in

In the past, social psychologists, sociologists,

This process will

allocation of national resources or taxpayers I money.

Information can be fed into the system through many filters, but there must be filters to econo- m iz e the hand1 in g and opt im izëthe ut iliz at ion, and because information has to be channelled and diffused for utilization and action.

be carefully planned and structured according to genuine needs. need carefully selected and tailored presentation at several levels. Scientific data may be stored for academic research in computers, be inter- preted and commented by experts for policy- makers through in- house papers, be incorporated by specialists in periodicals, cassette or video- training programmes, be discussed and applied by professionals with audio-visual aids in exten- sion work, be discussed and questioned in users' groups in a community centre or be the corner- stone of national poster 2ampaigns to promote awareness and change. The existence and proper functioning of such systems for information dis- semination and processing are no less important than primary schools or literacy group- teaching.

at least equal to the need for information. Often this latter ''newer" need may be met through re- allocation of national resources rather than pro- vision of new ones. newspapers, and some more mobile libraries, may be a better way of disseminating informa- tion and at the same time of retaining literacy, motivating for self- reliance, identifying daily life problems, fostering national integrity, in- creasing participation in national affairs and promoting cultural identification, than many hours of daily talk from the capital and central government over radio or television. (1)

Obviously, innovation can introduce strain and conflict into any system, and it is some- times the most "effective" innovations that cause the greatest tension. The first problem we must solve is that of defining what we mean by effec- tive. W e ought to be more precise (perhaps even more honest) in defining what we consider to be the basic needs and primary objectives, and w e must bear in mind the legitimate national and local aspirations of peoples and societies at dif- ferent stages of development.

In considering the overall influence of mass media in countries, it is not enough to confine studies to specific campaigns, say in health, agriculture or education. These types of pro- grammes also have indirect or unintended effects. W e must attempt to assess the wider andprobably

(I) Gunnar R. Naesselund, Communication Poli-

In order to economize, the outlets have to

One piece of information may

The need for communication is bound to be

A number of local rural

cies in Unesco's Programme, Paris, April 1974, pages 10-13.

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more pervasive influence of commercially and/ or politically oriented mass media in terms of increased aspirations, possible sources of frus- tration and conflict, changing patterns of consump- tion andlife styles, weakening of traditional bonds, changing authority patterns, stereotypes and images of other countries, and so on.

Changes from oral to electronic media - sometimes missing out the intermediate stage of print - the use of traditional and electronic media side by side, the taking over and trans- formation of cultural forms are but a few of many questions that could be examined. W e might also ask whether or not a "package deal" is inevi- table. Need the "candyfloss" world always ac- company economic and technical aid? Not that the "candyfloss" world is the only thing that is portrayed by commercial mass media, for they do bring pictures and stories of news and current affairs from developed countries to those living in the developing countries. Demonstrations, riots, revolutions, poverty, squalor and aliena- tion can be presented side by side with the attrac- tive trappings of the consumer- oriented, affluent society. person in the South American or African village? What do w e know about his ability to deal with this sort of information glut?

Given that social change cannot occur except through organized social communication, com- munication institutions perform numerous and vital functions in the service of national develop- ment. In transitional societies they are vital for inducing the members of society to adapt to those changes which are a prerequisite for development, to help establish a general climate favourable to new ways of life, to teach the population the nu- merous new skills that development and transi- tion demand them to perform, and raise levels of aspiration.

The demand for cable networks and systems is manifesting itself and results in the steady ac- cretion of the basis for distribution of broadband services. It is becoming increasingly probable that cable development represents the path into

But what impact has this on the young

the "wired city" when desired. the systems involves heavy financial investments and raises legal, economic and political problems in countries where both television and the laying and maintenance of cables are a monopoly of the State or of bodies operating under licence to it.

In many computer-based systems presently in operation, it is already difficult to separate the communications and data processing functions; many communications systems use computers to switch either circuits or messages. This over- lap has raised new problems of the boundaries between communications systems and the "re- ceiver". In thelong term, technological advances are likely to blur completely the interface between the computer and the communication system, giving rise to a new concept of "teleprocessing".

immediate priorities of the present circumstances may override proper consideration of longer- term policy issues, and possibly damage future oppor- tunities for integrated telecommunication devel- opment. cable television's form and future are not best resolved in on- off decisions about specific pro- posals. Rather, they need to be expressed in a series of carefully evaluated and costed choices related to the schedules of medium- andlong- term policy and planning decisions.

Sensible longer- term policies for future de- velopment can only be based on evidence gained from carefully organized and evaluated experi- ments in the short term. must be clearly defined in their purposes, and adequate procedures must be used to assess them. Furthermore, these experiments must ensure impartial and CO- ordinated consideration of the public interest. Given current economic and political pressures and the problems inherent in forecasting future requirements, it appears most sensible to co-ordinate teledistribution with policies and plans for an integrated national tele- communications network in the future which will answer the social need to communicate.

Installation of

There is the ever-present danger that the

The question of teledistribution and

Cable experiments

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Chapter 2

International communication

Communication is an activity which does not res- pect boundaries set up by logic of individual dis- ciplines, by geographical frameworks or by eco- nomic separations. The free movement and flow of people, ideas and materials is a fundamental issue for man and society. Neither technologically nor socially is communication a matter purely of national dimensions. Communication policies and planning within a country cannot be formulated or implemented without constant reference to inter- national involvements. Nations are called upon to frame their national policies with due regard to a number of widely accepted international agree- ments and standards.

Most countries have external broadcasting and public relations/information services, which pose basic questions concerning their objectives, control and financial resources. time, the almost constant inward flow, for almost all countries, requires attention. This includes such matters as the sources and quality of news reports, import of films, and the impact of foreign radio and television - whether through re- corded programmes or direct transmission.

At present, the power of communication - na- tionally and internationally - rests mostly in the hands of governments or business enterprises. With such power ever increasing, the community of people - of a nation, region and the whole world - for the good of their own freedom and development, and the integrity of their society, must see that those who have this communication power and po- tential, use it with the highest sense of responsi- bility. nology becomes, it still remains basically only the machinery- the means, and cannot function any better than the institutions, policies and planning that direct and control it.

Some relevant international communications questions

International communication, which includes

At the same

No matter how large or developed the tech-

intergovernmental as well as international busi- ness activities, gives rise to many important issues. These issues must be known, faced and must be a contingency of the formulation of na- tional communication policy and planning.

Certain questions come to mind. What are the possibilities and limitations of international communication networks - those in operation now and those potentially possible? What are the bar- riers and obstacles to the "free flow of informa- tion" - once this important concept is itself clearly understood and defined? How much is really an equal exchange of communication, and how much is a one- way "pipeline" from the industrially more developed world to the developing countries? What are the factors - social, economic, political and legal - which determine the nature and degree of the import of media materials? What should be national policy regarding "cultural privacy", to protect the fragile pattern of autochthonous cultures against the massive intrusion of foreign mass media contents? Where is the demarcation line between a protective screening and harmful isolationist policy which would deprive the nation of the cultural achievements of the world as a whole? Can we assess the content of local media for cultural indicators which would provide a ful- ler comprehension of each culture and would thus improve the potential for truly empathetic inter- national communication? What of the multina- tional operations of communication industries, from news agencies and broadcasting to electronic equipment manufacturers?

Other questions at the international level are those which are of importance to the arrangement of international agreements and regional policies, For example, copyright and performing rights agreements have historically tended to encourage, by means of copyright laws and international copy- right conventions, forms of control over the dis- tribution of books and other sorts of intellectual and artistic property, and have more often favoured

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the industrialized over the developing countries. An examination of the effects of these conventions would enable national communication policy- makers to recommend appropriate diplomatic action. There are also here such questions as frequency allocation for radio, television, micro- wave transmission, point- to- point satellite communi- cation, which are all subject to international agree- ment and need critical examination.

ware of communication systems - for example, TV, cassettes, tapes, phonographs, etc., and how these are tending to exert monopoly control in both hardware and software systems - demand critical analysis, which is important to any coun- try considering the adoption of communication strategies involving thes e technological innovations. Once a particular communications technical system is adopted the magnitude of the total investment committed to that system constitutes a powerful force conditioning future choices for further de- velopment. tive sources are needed at both national and inter- national levels as well as an analysis of the struc- tures of control, both external and internal, arising from investment decisions regarding communica- tions equipment and systems.

questions can best be studied - and the necessary research can best be rganized and co-ordinated- by regional and inter &I tional organizations. This implies active collaboration between international agencies (ITU, Unesco, etc. ), international pro- fessional bodies engaged in this field (International Press Institute, International Broadcast Institute, International Film and Television Council, Inter- national Association for Mass communication Re- search, etc. ), and other international organizations dealing with broader fields of social sciences, but which also enter the communication field (Interna- tional Council of Philosophy and the Human Sci- ences, the International Council of the Social Sci- ences, etc. ), in order to make better known the relevant international communication questions, issues and research needed, and to make certain that they are being competently dealt with. (1)

The international flow of communication: news flow

While the use of newer communication tech- nologies, such as satellites, makes possible the very rapid, even instantaneous, flow of com- munications and news to and between news agen- cies, the press and broadcasting services in all parts of the world, not all of them benefit to the same extent from these new facilities available. There are national news agencies in ninety coun- tries, but they are unequally distributed and there are great differences in the scope and effectiveness of their operations. Most national news agencies depend upon the five major world agencies - located

Engineering standards embodied in the hard-

Critical examinations of the alterna-

It is more than likely that all these types of

in the U. S. A. , the United Kingdom, France and - the USSR - to carry news about their countries to other countries.

The majority of countries operate external broadcasting services as a means of communi- cating with people in other countries, directly or through the intermediary of national radio ser- vices. All television services give broadcast time to foreign news, and show considerable quantities of television programmes and films obtained from abroad. Many of them Co- operate from time to time in covering events of common interest and in producing programmes for each other's audiences. home have now become the means by which most people regularly receive knowledge and form ideas about other peoples and countries.

of selection from the abundant raw material avail- able. The criteria by which relevant news is selected for distribution have never been closely analysed either by news practitioners or by media researchers, both of whom have relied chieflyon the "eye for news", the "news instinct", "what draws attention", or the "rule of thumb" devel- oped by the journalistic tradition which determines the order of importance and manner of presenta- tion of news items, chiefly on the basis of unwrit- ten rules. Deviation from these mythical rules has been held to be a manifestation of poor journalism.

Newsmen are asking more and more often now, "what to tell" and "how to tell it". These problems are especially acute in publicly con- trolled broadcasting, where attention must be devoted to providing a balanced service to all social groups. the news" are no longer enough; what is needed is an analytic approach to news activity, based on broad information and rational decisions, along with increasing skill.

national flow of communications - and "news flow" - cannot be unrelated to the power interests of the political or economic owner of the news medium. In the same way, the interests of the medium owner cannot deviate very far from those of the social class in power in the society. In theview of Sir Charles Moses, Secretary-General of the Asian Broadcasting Union, "as an influence on international relations, news is the most important ingredient in broadcast programmes - television or radio. The content and the form of presenta- tion of broadcast news bulletins can have a bene- ficial influence or just the reversel1.(2) Sir Charles

( 1 )

Radio and television in the

News work basically involves the process

Speed and an instinctive "eye for

It is self-evident that the content of the inter-

Unesco, International Programme of Com- munication Research. COM/MD/20. OD cit.. D. 19.

I - . - , I - - - -

(2) Charles Moses, "Third Wo;ld Broadcasters Seek to Bridge a Gao". Intermedia f Tnternational . - 0 - I , \ -

Broadcast Institute), No. 5, 1974, p. 8.

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outlines the work which has been undertaken in intra-union news workshops, which have taken place in Tokyo, 1971 and Cologne, 1973, where the dialogue between professionals in the work- shops has made it abundantly clear that there is a need to improve the global and regional move- ment of news - in greater speed and at lower cost but at the same time, to recognize the divergen- cies in approach to both content and treatment.

Arab States are not as concernedwith"sensationa1" news as their colleagues in Europe and, particu- larly, in North America; they feel that there should be more items which are constructive from and about their regions, and which emphasize achieve- ment as well as disasters.

While Europe and America are anxious to speed up the movement of news by satellite, many developing countries are still more interested, at this stage, in their practical problems, such as the removal of obstacles caused by airport and customs procedures. While the Arab broadcast- ing organizations, for example, are making rapid strides toward establishing a regional network that will permit regular and frequent news exchanges amongst their members, this desirable situation is still very remote as far as the vast Asian re- gion is concerned. Exchanges bylandlines or micro- wave are now possible between Japan and Korea; between Singapore, West Malaysia and Thailand; and between Turkey, Iran and Pakistan. could be many years before these sub-regions can be really linked together.

countries of the Pacific, such as Samoa, Fiji, Gilbert and Ellice, the Solomons and Micronesia. There are virtually no links joining the widely separated island countries. Their only hope for the future lies in getting into the satellite queue, but, because the total populations involyed are very small, they are likely to be at the end of the queue for a long time to come. There is far more immediate need for elementary equipment, such as the telex, in facilitating international communications and news flow.

These considerations stress again the strong differences of approach to news in the developed and developing countries. There are a number of points about which the developing countries are unanimous: that the agency services are overloaded with items from and about Europe and North America, where they are headquartered; that in- adequate coverage is given to news emanatingfrom countries of Asia, Africa and South America, where about 90% of the world's population live; that the agencies, when transmitting news stories from Europe and North America, often assume, quite erroneously, that newsmen in other parts of the world have a knowledge of the relevant background similar to that of their colleagues in the countries originating the stories.

The broadcasters of Asia, Africa and the

But it

There is the difficult problem of the island

The presence and active participation of rep- resentatives of the major news and newsfilm agencies in the 1973 Cologne workshop couldlead to anumber of long- term benefits for newsmen working in developing countries. They learned that one valid reason for newsfilm stories sub- mitted from their countries not being used by the agencies was the high proportion of techni- cally poor prints, poor camera work and poor direction. mendation aimed at assisting broadcastingorgani- zations in developing countries to contribute ma- terial of appropriate technical and professional standards. This can be done mainly by provid- ing professional training for journalists, camera- men, directors and by improving the quality of the cam era equipment available.

Another useful recommendation stressed the importance of establishing, as soon as possible, regional news co-ordinating centres, where these do not presently exist, and the placing at "gate- way" points in each region of experienced jour- nalists to assist in co-ordination and selection of news items and in keeping down costs.

The opportunity of the carefully considered Cologne recommendations being positively imple- mented in a large way presented itself in Rio de Janeiro, November 1974, when all eight regional broadcasting unions, together with representatives of the major broadcasters of North America, met for the Second International Broadcasting Confer- ence. The Cologne workshop was seen to have laid a solid foundation for real progress. There now should be seen, not only a speeding up and an increase in the flow of news, but evidence of efforts to correct the existing imbalances which are resented in Asia, Africa and Latin America. This change is bound to be a gradual process; but a spirit of CO- operation and understanding should ensure that news items from developing countries will progressively appear more and more frequently in the television and radio news bulletins of the major broadcasters of Europe and North America, and that the international flow of communication will be more balanced.

of the most powerful vehicles of international in- formation, as well as one of the most effective and influential communications "weapons". Since the 1930s, when sound broadcasting missed an excellent chance to become a world medium of international co-operation and understanding, it has mainly developed its international function as a device of political and ideological prosely- tization. ( 1)

The result was an important recom-

External broadcasting is considered as one

(1) University of Ljubljana in association with Unesco research study on "Content and ef- fects of external radio broadcastind'. bv u - I

Tomo Martelanc et al., Paris 1975.

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This misdirection actively began with the Nazi propaganda, which turned this marvellous new communication technology - international radio - into a strong tool of propaganda diffusion. Later, during the Second World War, sound broadcasting assumed the rôle of one of the most forceful means of information, persuasion and war propaganda. The ensuing cold war in the post-war period amply used all the potentialities of the international radio for delivery of propaganda messages backwards and forwards across a divided Europe.

Today, in a period of relativelymitigated, and in places improving, international relations where the nations (above all the super powers) are more reluctant to resort to force, international broad- casting has taken on a different rôle.

The most recent data on this world-wide com- munication phenomenon, come from a Unesco sup- ported two-year study. (1) Very few attempts had ever been made to compare the television programme structures of different nations, or to measure or study the flow of information among nations via the television screen. A prevalent view empha- sized the free flow of information - an idealsys- tem in which sovereign national networks distri- buted the best programmes from all over the world, balanced by their own productions. This system, however, had never been shown to exist; in fact, evidence tended more and more to show a quite different effect.

Professor Nordenstreng, Dr. Varis and the Tampere teams drew a number of conclusions from their inventory of the composition of tele- vision programmes, particularly from the point of view of programme material imported to a country from outside, combined with a survey of the international networks for sales and exchanges of programme material for television. The tele- vision stations of nearly 50 countries were sur- veyed about their programme schedules, the sources of their programmes, and the conduits through which international programme transac- tions are conducted.

While there are those who would question whether the methodologyused here was sufficiently developed to allow such broad conclusions to be drawn, still the Tampere/Unesco study is in fact the first comprehensive survey which makes it possible to form an idea of this very important subject matter. the flow of material is seen to be extremely im- balanced, and most programmes in international distribution are tailored to satify audience tastes in the United States, Canada, Western Europe and Japan, where most commercial sales take place. Two indisputable trends were uncovered in this international flow: a one-way traffic from the big exporting countries to the rest of the world; and the dominance of entertainment material in the flow.

On these statistics collected,

Dominance of the market by the Unitedstates But it is only comes through as a striking reality.

part of the great disparity on the international television scene between a handful of producer- exporter nations and the vast majorityof consumer countries. The United States and China are largely self- sufficient, importingonly a small percentage of their programmes. Japan and the Soviet Union also depend mainly on their own productions. But the vast majority of other countries are heavily dependent on foreign imports in their program min g.

The reasons for United States predominance on the international television market are both historical and economic, having to do not only with production capacity, but also with the fact .that the United States got off to a headstart. Un- til the early 1960s, the United States had more television sets than the rest of the world together. By 1962 when there were 50 million sets in the United States, there were 53 million elsewhere. This meant that the big distributors in the United States and elsewhere could produce and market shows with the new export market in mind.

Obviously though, the economic realities in receiver countries constitute an equally impor- tant factor. While it costs $100,000 to make an instalment of "Peyton Place", a country like Finland can buy it for $500. Most countries can- not afford to fill the hours of broadcasting with home-made products any more than they can afford to shop around endlessly for exactly the pro- grammes they want. What happens too often then is that "I Love Lucy" (which closed down "live" in the United States in 1974 after 23 years and 495 shows) becomes an import answer.

For more complex reasons, there is also a heavy imbalance in exchange between the West and the Socialist countries of Eastern Europe. While more than 3,000 hours of television pro- grammes a year flow from the Western countries through Eurovision, to the Socialist countries, the report reveals the flow in the opposite direc- tion, through Intervision, is only 1,000 hours a year.

No matter how it is viewed, however, the study indicates that the world television market is likely to be dominated by the industrialized Western countries for a long time. Vast regions of the world, and particularly the developing countries, have little choice but to depend on the almost exclusive services of the Western agencies for news and much of their TV programming.

(1) Unesco. Television traffic - a one-wav street. I I

A survey and analysis of the international flow of television Dropramme material. bv L U - . I

Kaarle Nordenstreng and Tapio Varis, Re- ports and Papers on Mass Communication, No. 70, Paris 1974.

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The authors of this report conclude that the trend will reverse. more balanced flow not only on the regional broad- casting unions, but also on the willingness to co- produce across national frontiers and particularly across different social and political systems.

Whenever and wherever an indiscriminate "free flow of information" principle is recognized, formulation of national cultural and communica- tion policies will be needed. practical problems are important in the present- day television industry, but the basic problem has been, and remains, the social and political rôle of television communication: what is the real com- munication policy regarding this medium in vari- ous societies?

They pin their hopes for a

The technical and

Satellite com munication

The constant advances in communication technol- ogy and the proliferation of information, confront individuals, nations and decision- and policy- makers with increasingly complicated dilemmas of choice and utilization, as the technology continues to de- velop faster than the principles and regulations guiding its best use.

There is probably no area of technological de- velopment today to which this applies in greater measure, than that of communication satellites, which, along with submarine cables, serve increas- ingly well international communication and global tele - communications.

Today, only a dozen years after the first ex- perimental television transmission between North America and Europe by means of communication satellite, it is accepted as normal that eventslike the Olympic Games, World Cup Soccer Champion- ships, a royal wedding, a United Nations meeting in New York or men in space are seen as they happen, simultaneously, by hundreds of millions of people in all parts of the world.

There are those(1) who consider the communi- cation satellite as not just the extension of existing communications devices, but as a kind of techno- logical quantum jump causing a major restructur- ing of our society. In this century, the automobile is perhaps the most notable example of something similar that has already happened.

satellite communication to exclusive national use was Canada, which in 1973 with its Anik I, II and its Telesat Canada, began operating the world's first domestic synchronous orbit satellite system for telecommunication purposes and for the dis- tribution and reception of television and radio pro- grammes, through low- cost earth stations and low-powered transmitters, over vast, distant areas of that country. oped to cover all but central Canada.

After the USSR, the first country to apply

The system is to be devel-

Australia, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Iran,

Japan and the U. S. A. are actively considering the establishment of domestic systems similar to Canada's as ameans of achieving morequickly and/or at less expense full and efficient telecom- munication services, and of expanding education. The countries falling within the European Broad- casting Zone have also, for some years, been studying the establishment of a satellite system to complement the present terrestrial Eurovision network. It could also be connected with the ORBITA satellite system of the USSR and Eastern Europe for further East-West programmme ex changes.

While the existing satellites in the Soviet Union system and the satellite presently contem- plated by Western Europe are intended to provide point- to- point telecommunication services, includ- ing the relay of television programmes, in the long- term European satellites with the capacity to broadcast directly to community or individual thlevision receivers can be anticipated. An allo- cation of a frequency band in the radio communi- cation spectrum has been made for this purpose in the European, as well as in other regions. This development will open up the possibility of wide diffusion of television programmes of all types, including those regionally planned or pro- duced, and also could include national pro- grammes whose reception beyond their originat- ing national frontiers may not be welcome.

In 1974, the first of anew generationof broad- casting satellites was put into orbit. These can transmit television programmes directly to com- munity reception points equipped with special an- tennae within a defined area. This development makes it possible to broadcast educational and cultural programmes to rural and remote popu- lations long before this would have been possible by the gradual and slow expansion of terrestrial networks.

and the means that would justify and support the installation of such domestic satellite systems, but studies already made for the Arab States, Africa and South America show that technologically it would be possible to develop regional systems in which the participating countries shared the use, the control and the costs.

the social and political questions become sharper. Are communication satellites to be used for the spreading of understanding and appreciation of other peoples, their cultures and ways of life, thereby bringing about better relations between peoples and countries and strengthening the pos- sibility of peace and security? Or, are they to

(1) For example, Arthur Clarke, in his address to a Unesco Space Communication Confer- ence, Paris, 2-9 December 1969.

Few individual countries have the population

As this communication technology advances,

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be a new way of fomenting the conflict of ideolo- gies, for the promotion of narrow nationalist poli- cies and the achievement of narrow political objec- tives? Are theyto be so organized andadministered under multinational co-operative control that they can be used for constructive international purposes, with their benefits shared between the rich and the poorer countries? clusively under the national control of the few countries now economically strong enough to af- ford them, and to be used for national purposes only, commercial or political, or both?

Would it be better to have a limitation rather than an extension of communication, if its domi- nating policies and purposes are the wrong ones? If it is controlled by the State for the promotion of purely national or ideological aims with no right of dissent permitted, or by private or corporate interests for merely acquisitive ends, little good can continue to come from the satellite develop- ment. This need not happen. But it will depend on the policies of those in positions of responsi- bility and power, in government and in business, including the com munications bu sines s.

its solution, when he wrotein 1970(1):

O r are they to remain ex-

Jean d'Amy has spoken of the problem and

The communications satellite will not reach its full development without an unprecedented degree of international CO- operation on the part of governments. Yet this development demands concessions in precisely that area of national sovereignty which governments have guarded most jealously, and which they have been charged by their peoples to protect and defend. Politically, the choice is between Statism and expansion, between the defence of apparently reasonable but soon- to- be- outmoded principles on the one hand and, on the other, a joint creative search by governments for such new principles and social structures as will permit the communications instrument to evolve for the good of all.

Guiding principles on the use of satellite broadcasting

As the technological and economic conditions for this global flow of information, with all its poten- tialities, are achieved, even greater responsibility will be required of those who control the services and produce the material diffused. The UnitedNa- tions, the International Telecommunication Union, Unesco, governments and broadcasting organiza- tions are studying the situation with the object of establishing principles and arriving at international agreements that will enable the fullest use of satel- lite broadcasting in the service of a "true and genuine free and balanced flow of ideas, theex- pansionof education, and the promotion of mutual understanding of peoples, with due and proper

respect for sovereignty of nations and diversity of cultures".

As early as 1962, the Unesco General Con- ference authorized the Director- General to study "the implications of the new techniques of com- munication by artificial satellite". The resulting programme activities included the convening of a conference of experts on international arrange- ments in the space communication field in Decem- ber 1969, where the prospects as well as the threats of this new technology were discussed. (2) Among the principles formulated for the use of satellites were: they should make the flow of visual news in the world more balanced;

their facilities should be made available to all countries with special regard to the smaller and developing countries;

they should be available for communicators all over the world for the coverage, collection, transmission and dissemination of news;

they should provide conditions enabling mass media all over the world to co-operate for the exchange of news and coverage of current events. Unesco's activities have demanded in this

area continued Co- operation with the United Na- tions, in its space applications programme, and with ITU in connexion with assessment of needs for frequencies in the satellite broadcasting ser- vice, etc.

The idea of a "Declaration of Principles" guiding the use of satellites was brought up and strongly supported, and Unesco was encouraged to formulate such guidelines in collaboration with broadcasters and their regional organizations. From 1969 to 1972, Unesco held a series of con- sultations with expert groups including the repre- sentatives of regional broadcasting and news or- ganizations. These recommendations led to the submission of a draft text to the seventeenth ses- sion of the General Conference of Unesco in 1972, and "A Declaration of Guiding Principles on the Use of Satellite Broadcasting for the Free Flow of Information, the Spread of Education and Greater Cultural Exchange"( 3) was proclaimed.

The debates revealed a conflict of views which could not at that time be easily reconciled. The deepest of these was the basic issue of freedom of expression. Another was the authority of or- ganizations within the United Nations system to deal with these questions. On the one hand were the fears of developing and other smaller nations of being exposed to unwanted programmes, over which they had little or no control. On the other

(I) d'Arcy, Jean, "Challenge to Co-operation", Saturday Review, 24 October 1970.

(2) Unesco, Broadcasting from Space, Reports and Papers on Mass Communication No. 60, Paris 1970.

(3) Unesco, COM-74/CONF. 616. 4.

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hand, were the obvious benefits which individual countries and their people could gain from having access to programmes which would promote the exchange of ideas and knowledge.

ted and, in part, contradictory, which in itself explains the complexity of the problems and con- flicts which emerged during the seventeenth ses- sion of the General Conference of Unesco. Fear of the unknown and the uncertainty surrounding a new powerful technology in the service of the few, prevailed in the debate. were in fact met by the principal Articles of the Declaration recognizing that development of direct satellite broadcasting shall be guided by the prin- ciples and rules of international law, in particular the Charter of the Unit&d Nations and the Outer Space Treaty; that it shall respect the sovereignty and equality of all States; and that States shall reach or promote prior agreements concerning direct satellite broadcasting to the population of countries other than the country of origin of the transmission. This, of course, would include transmissions of commercial advertising.

States could reach mutual agreements on the con- tent of satellite programmes in the fields of edu- cation, science, culture and information dealt with in the Declaration. There would, however, be other cases where such agreement could not be reached and where plans for satellite transmis- sions would have to be abandoned or revised con- siderably to avoid breach of the Declaration.

frontiers, TV transmissions via broadcast satel- litewill be extremelydifficult to jam. The Unesco Declaration, it should be noted, does not attempt to embrace traditional use of radio waves, nor does it touch the point- to- point communications that are carried over the INTELSAT systems or similar future satellite systems serviced by large ground stations, over which governments normally will have full control.

One holds that there is an infringement of the right of the individual to have access to information, regardless of frontiers, and the other, that there is a violation of the rights of sovereign and inde- pendent States to decide for themselves what pro- grammes their people should be exposed to.

in principle the right of the individual to have ac- cess to information regardless of frontiers, main- tain that as long as broadcasting by satellite re- mains a monopoly of a few countries this right is meaningless and even prejudicial to countries with- out access to satellites.

ing for Member States, but it does state principles which are basedupon a genuine concern of developing

All these issues were and still are interrela-

These considerations

There appeared to be little doubt that many

Unlike short- wave radio broadcasts across

But still two viewpoints are at loggerheads.

There are also those who, while supporting

This Unesco Declaration is as such, not bind-

countries and others, that outer space should not be used for exploitative purposes which are un- desirable for cultural, moral or other reasons in countries within the reach of direct broadcast systems proposed.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES CONCERNING THE ROLE OF THE MASS MEDIA

Fundamental mincides

In 1972, the seventeenth session of the General Conference of Unesco adopted a resolution, which requested "the Director- General to prepare and to submit to the General Conference at its eight- eenth session a draft declaration concerning the fundamental principles governing the use of the mass information media with a view to strengthen- ing peace and international understanding and com- bating war propaganda, racialism and apartheid".(l)

that there was an enormous difficulty in striking an appropriate balance between, on the one hand, freedom of in- formation and, on the other, the need and moral obligation for the media to act responsibly, in order to prevent the many abuses of freedom.

One of the aims of having a free flow of in- formation is to ensure a diversity of sources of news and opinions, but the problem for many countries is that their own economic resources are not sufficient to support strong local compet- ing media, particularly when faced with the mas- sive importation of programmes from foreign sources. information and opinion simply cannot operate when certain countries lack the production capa- city to participate meaningfully in such exchange on an equal national basis.

Where media are used to sow untruth, seeds of hatred and distrust, to offend national feelings or customs, or where they fail to make even an attempt to understand the legitimate cultures and aspirations of certain countries, the receiving countries are understandably greatly disturbed, with both a sense of concern and of helplessness. Media organizations must assume their responsi- bilities in this contribution to a more certain peace and to ever greater understanding.

At the same time, there are difficulties in- herent in drafting any set of fundamental principles intended to be applicable to the world's mass media. There is at present no international or- ganization in existence that can or would want to adjudicate the performance of the media, andthe

(1) Unesco, Meeting of Experts on a Draft Dec- laration concerning the Rôle of the Mass

It was recognized at the start

The principle of a free interchange of

Media, COM- 74/CÖNF. 616/5, Paris, 25 April 1974.

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most that such declarations can do is to state a set of moral principles which the media would be encouraged but not required by law to follow. Constitutional protections of freedom of speech and of the press would preclude certain countries from enacting legislation requiring media within their jurisdiction to comply with any such declara- tion. In short, we have a long way to go before we can establish acceptable international norms on media content. W e do not know enough about the deep realities of international communication systems - the political, economic and cultural constraints on the achievement of a true and equitable flow of information. But international considerations are often paramount in the formu- lation of national plans. W e need more research, more enlightened policies based upon understand- ing of other people's lives before the multiplicity of international communication problems can begin to be solved.

This reality was evident in the debate on in- ternational communication issues in the eighteenth session of the General Conference of Unesco where opinion was largely in favour of the concept of free flow of information but pointed also to the hypo- crisy of this much publicized concept when ques- tions of equality, of access to media and to infor- mation were considered. It was considered in some circles that the sole "free flow" concept was outdated and belongs to the ideas of nineteenth centuryliberalism and could no longer be applied to twentieth centurytechnology. A number of dele- gates to this General Conference observed that "free flow" had little meaning for those lacking the necessary infrastructures and means to com- municate and concluded that practical action to correct the present imbalance in the multi-way flow of information, especially between developed

and developing countries, should be accorded the highest priority.

national communication it was considered that there must exist both the right to be informed and the right to inform and that the latter right carries with it responsibility for objective re- porting. the mass media in ensuring the preservation of peace and mutual understanding between peoples was emphasized and misuse of the media in this respect was generally condemned.

If the concept of free flow of information, especially the interpretations which have become attached to it over the years was questioned, however, a new concept was proposed to which Unesco should turn its attention. This introduced the possibilities for assimilation of a new human right - the right to communicate. This was seen to have meaning both at the national and interna- tional levels. The international considerations in the right to communicate relating to the infor- mation gap between developed and developing countries, which should be studied and analysed, were stated to be most important in the formula- tion of communication policies - even at the na- tional level. Such policies could assure access to and participation in the communication process; could reconcile the right to inform and the right to be informed; could proclaim the need for a balanced flow of information between developing and developed areas of the world and could en- compass both the possibilities of newer technolo- gies and the responsibilities of the media.

tion decade we come once again to a rethinking of what was appropriate to past events and what will be necessary for the future.

Concerning the question of content in inter-

The vast and growing importance of

Thus, at the mid-point of the communica-

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Chapter 3

Communication research - Informing the policy-makers

In modern society, the mass media industries have developed into highly significant institutions. This significance a lies to many different levels

If something is socially significant, then it is self- evident that there is aneed to know something about it. In addition, decisions are being made daily throughout the world about media policies and programme output. decisions based?

within society. ( 1 d P

But on what are these

Major relevant questions

Many questions arise, as policy-makers and plan- ners in every country are faced with a number of dilemmas - often framed in the form of controver- sies between ideals and reality - which must be resolved for the good of all. Some general examples of these questions would include:

What happens to the individual in an era when tech- nology is increasingly able to provide an informa- tion overload to influence him and also is capable of invadine. recording. commterizinehis deevest privacy?

How do you reconcile the right to free information with the right of the individual to privacy?

How do you further the declared right of freedom of opinion and expression of opinion?

Although there now exists the technical possibility for the wider distribution of a greater variety of information than ever before and for themuch more rapid interchange of data, how can this be reconciled with the possibilities of mental pollu- tion, the irrelevance of much of this mass of in- formation to many audiences; how can raw data be translated into understandable and usable terms?

Ideally, the media should be bonds of society and open vehicles of culture, education, information and leisure- time entertainment. and vet:

The media can often be viewed mostly as commer-

What can be done about the increasing lack of em- cial enterprises or as political tools?

pathy between professional communicators and the real needs of the social groups they serve? Do the commercial or the authoritarian defini- tions of news and cultural values really make a positive contribution to a true understanding of what is going on in the world?

tendency seems to be towards a concentration of ownership and a reduction of independent out- lets; the present media structures have grown from systems which were designed to effect a vertical information and persuasion flow from the top to the bottom of society, but what of the "horizontal" dialogue within and throughout so- ciety which is so surely lacking at the present time?

One economic fact seems quite clear - feeding the voracious appetite of the new communica- tions media will be a great deal more costly even than installing the hardware; how is it to be paid for while providing the service indis- pensable to an informed citizen?

O n the one hand it is contended that the mediawill reflect the values and the norms of society and

In the modern world the economic and political

(1) Unesco, Mass Media in Society, The Need for Research. Revorts and PaDers on Mass Communication, No. 59, Paris 1970.

(2) Unesco, Proposals for an International Pro- gramme of Communication Research, op. cit. page 4. "By mass media it is understood that all those industries and institutions which pro- duce communication services or products are included. Typically, these will include news- papers, periodicals, books, cinema, radio, television, records, tapes, tape cassettes, comic books, outdoor and mail advertising and the network structures of news agencies, micro-wave linkages, etc.

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on the other they are seen as imposing values and lowering thresholds of public sensitivity to- wards such things as violence and permissiveness.

Many believe that the mass media have played a vital rôle in building the sense of national u

community

What happens when each group can tune in whom- ever it wants, including its own particular prophets?

How do you reconcile the rights of individuals to access to a whole world culture with the rights of national cultures to resist dilution by alien influences ?

How do you achieve the right of equal access to information when media tend to be urban- oriented and the information gap between de- veloped and developing countries tends to grow ever wider?

The communication satellite can provide free ac- cess to information and education on an inter- national scale; it can also provide the base for a new communication colonialism and cultural imperialism, if one- way communication traffic is the rule.

media, whose interests are served - in what- ever way - and what resources do they use?

The main problems lie in the fact that while com- munication has become a matter of public signi- ficance and concern, governments and their people usually do not know enough about the nature of the communication process in society, its possibili- ties and limitations, and about the real communi- cation needs of the public, nor do they have enough knowledge about the capacities and the orientation of the public and private communication systems to answer questions such as those posed above. Thus, too often, nations and peoples have not been able to set up or contribute to the communi- cation systems that best correspond to their ac- tual development andoverall needs of their society. Critical analysis and various types of research are vitally needed to examine continuously the issues raised by mass communication in society today.

Finally, who really governs and controls the

Communication research - Dast and Dresent In a broad sense communication research has ex- isted for centuries, although under different names. Aristotle defined the study of rhetoric - which can be interpreted as a synonym for communication - as the search for all the available means of per- suasion. purposes in mind than persuasion, Artistotle im- plied that the prime goal of communication was persuasion, an attempt to sway other men to the speaker's point of view. This view of communi- cation purpose remained popular until the end of

Although a speaker might have other

the eighteenth century, by which time the con- cepts of thought known as "faculty psychology" had invaded rhetoric. A clear distinction was made between the soul and the mind; this dualism was interpreted as a basis for two independent purposes of communication. One purpose was intellectual or cognitive in nature, the other was emotional. Communication was then seen to per- form three functions: inform (appeal to the mind), persuade (appeal to the emotions), and to enter- tain. This fragmentation of consciousness easily led to the conclusion that man had three isolated areas of consciousness which exist and operate independently. However, the basis for this dis- tinction does not follow from reality and it is no longer supported by psychologists. (1)

An entirely different view of communication and the rôle of consciousness is quickly develop- ing among present- day communication researchers. During recent years communication research has been stimulated by the new development of society and the rise of mass communication, For the past 35 years especially, this research has been increasingly seeking its path and its proper field, with ever- growing necessity.

When studying communication between human beings, interest has been centred on both micro and macro levels, both on psychological charac- teristics of human beings as communicating ani- mals and on the characteristics of society as a communicating entity. Scientific disciplines are usually divided either according to their own methodology or to their own problem area. the same time, there are those, such as medical science, which while having a very specific prob- lem area, use methods of several other disciplines. Ancient rhetoric formed an art in itself but modern communication science has borrowed both its methodology and definition of problems, often- times, from other disciplines and like medicine is interested in solving certain problems while using available research tools from other disciplines.

however, only a result of scientific development, but of changes in the social structure, early 1930s, Western social scientists became more and more interested in applied methods of social research to improve the efficiency of the newly-developed mass media. The commercially- oriented mass communication research which emerged in the United States was a consequence of the marketing orientation of a consumer society.

munication in a different manner than the empiri- cal American orientation. In the twentieth century,

(1)

At

The rise of communication research is not,

In the

European traditions have treated mass com-

Tapio Varis "Trends in Communication Re- search", Mass Media Research, Lutheran WorldFederation, Geneva, April 1974, p. 21.

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two main trends of Western sociology studying ideological problems have been pursued: the so- ciology of knowledge and mass communications sociology. They are seen to deal with similar problems although both came into existence in different historical conditions. The sociology of knowledge has European roots, while mass com- munication sociology was from the very beginning an American product.

The difference is partly due to historical con- ditions and to methods of moulding public opinion in Europe and America. Western European coun- tries are relatively homogenous nationally and philosophically. North America, in contrast, is populated by various ethnic and religious groups with a variety of backgrounds. American sociology has sought for ways of selecting common values andideological precepts shared by different groups rather than focusing on a single, highly formu- lated doctrine. Nowadays, the original differences in orientation are disappearing, as the sociology of knowledge is taught at several American uni- versities and mass communication sociology is gaining more and more interest in Europe.

Mass communication research was, until re- cently, another privilege of the more developed nations, and, quantitatively speaking, is still con- centrated in the Unitedstates. It is now generally recognized that Western mass communications research, reflecting its commercial origin and its strong and continuing dependency on the cor- porate economy, has concentrated its attention on the consumer side of the message system. In- numerable studies have examined the behaviour of audiences and/or publics and consumers - which messages stimulate them, which stimuli “mas- sage” them. Content analysis,too, has been pre- occupied with the question of whether the message was recognizable or blurred.

In short, mass communications research, with some notable exceptions, continues to take for granted the existing structure of society and especially the structure of the message- creating and transmitting apparatus. how effective that apparatus was and is in reach- ing audiences with messages that the power cen- tres in the society wished to have disseminated.

tion to this condition and the character of the re- search that has flowed out of it. has made some corrective proposals: “It is neces- sary to study the productive side - the media in- dustries . . . This means that we must study the history and development of media institutions (and their relationship to other institutions, including government). zation and structure, and about ownership, con- trol, resources and technology - as well as about the import of media material from other countries ... The question “what interests are being served by

It has focused on

James Halloran and others have called atten-

Halloran also

W e must ask questions about organi-

the media?” needs to be asked on the production side as well as on the use or consumption side.

If the ”great power centres” of developed societies are examined, inevitably the dominant productive and distributional units which constitute the engines of these industrial economies must be taken into account. These include, certainly more and more, the so- called multinational cor- porations, that is, the ”super- aggregations of private capital, corporately-organized, centrally managed and internationally dispersed, accord- ing to the overriding consideration of profitability and those factors which affect profitability namely, taxes, resources availabilities, labour costs, market size and ease of penetration, po- litical stability, and related matters”. (2) A central question for mass communications re- search then, becomes, to what extent do com- munication systems, locally, nationally, regionally and internationally relate to these dominant power nuclei in matters of control, structure and incen- tive? Such research could contribute to a better understanding of the major control mechanisms at work in contemporary Western society and perhaps point the way to alternative and more humanistic courses of social organization and development.

show increasing contribution of European and Japanese studies and a growing interest among the developing countries towards the problems of mass communication and condciousness. Be- cause there are not clear streams or schools which can be distinguished - due to the various levels of research needs and to historical factors of research practice - it is difficult to classify the present patterns of communication research. That the classification of research trends is un- systematic is due to the complexity of the field: “Communication has not become an academic discipline like physics or economics, but it has become an extraordinarilylively area of research and theory”, says Wilbur Schramm. (3)

Recent symposia on communication research

A new orientation

These and other developments led the General Conference of Unesco, at its fifteenth session

(1) James D. Halloran, Mass Media andsociety: The Challenge of Research, University of Leicester, 25 October 1973. Herbert I. Schiller, “Mass Communication Research on the Power Structures of Society- A Proposal”, Mass Media Research,Lutheran World Federation, Geneva, April 1974. Wilbur Schramm, ”Communication Research in the United States”. in The Science of Human Research, by Wilbur Schramm, Editor, New York, 1963,~. 1.

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(November 1968) to authorize the Director-General to undertake a long- term programme of research and to promote the study of the rôle and effects of the media of mass communication in society. The first specific meeting for this new programme took place the following June 1969 in Montreal. (1) It recommended that Unesco "consider a major international study of the present and future ef- fects of communication on the relations between changing societies and social groups, and on the individuals comprising them", so as "to identify the ways in which the mass media can best serve the needs of present and future society". This recommendation was ultimately approved by the sixteenth session of the General Conference of Unesco (November 1970), which in turn authorized the Director- General "to promote research within the framework of an international programme on the effects of mass communication on society".

meeting of its newly-formed International Advisory Panel on Communication Research(21, at which the lines were proposed along which such an in- ternational programme of communication research could proceed. This was followed by a second meeting (Paris, October 1973) which suggested further measures to advance the main idea and concept of the proposals under the headings "com- munication and community" and l'international flow". of communication research crystallized.

Obviously, the changes that occur in a society and in the lives of the people living in that society, following the advent of a new medium of communi- cation - like television - and the rapid and recent extension of older ones - like radio - will be a function not only of the medium but also of other innovations and, above all, of the nature, struc- ture and stage of development of that society. Even within a given social system, the impact will not be uniform, some areas will be more receptive or more capable of adjustment than others.

As far as individuals are concerned, it may be misleading to maintain that something is being caused solely by media stimuli. more useful to approach the question in terms of different people, with different predispositions and experiences, and with different ethnic linguis- tic or cultural backgrounds in different situations, as well as their different use of the material made available by the media. In this research the emphasis is not so much on direct causal re- lationships, but on the media exerting their in- fluence in and through the complex web of factors that make up society. the indirect, contributory and cumulative than on the causative.

specific social structures,

InApril of 1971, Unesco heldthe firstofficial

Out of these meetings a new philosophy

It has beenfound

The emphasis is more on

It is important to study the media within The media may exert

powerful influence in certain circumstances, but only as one amongst several forces. tended family, religious, school, community and peer group, all play their parts in the SO- cialization or developmental processes. The influence of the media is not confined to a direct medium- to-person impact, for they can work on the individual indirectly via the other agents. It is important to remember that the message from the medium is received into a frame of inter- personal relationships and communications that already exist. If we wish to know about the im- pact of a medium, w e must probe into existing networks as well as into the medium itself.

Them edia, particularly radio and television, do, of course, have straightforward entertain- ment functions and one main form of influence has been on leisure- time behaviour patterns. Moreover, different media can exert influence in many other subtle and probably more signifi- cant ways than these: they can be the chief re- porters of an environment beyond one's own senses; they can offer new models for identifica- tion; they can focus attention, widen horizons, show other ways of living; redefine problems; question traditional ways of doing things; suggest new answers; confer status on people and ideas, indicate approval and disapproval with regard to behaviour and attitudes; extend or limit the dia- logue and define what is important, what is in- teresting, and what is dangerous; they can make understandable what has been hitherto strange, as well as create confusion and uncertainty.

There are many speculations and precon- ceived answers about the nature and extent of the rôle of mass communication. These often need to be challenged by research. One of the most important things that research can do is to make the implicit explicit, and to make people aware of the nature and the policy implications of those basic assumptions which underlie their activities. first step in producing constructive change.

In many countries communication research can provide a picture of the communication pat- tern of society. It can show how the media and the messages are distributed and used, which are the main influences in the flow of informa- tion and opinion, which are the restricting fac- tors, what should be done to reach broader layers of the population, how development agents should approach such sectors, and how communication may be used for an effective "two-way" flow of information. Communication research can also

Ex-

Such critical analysis is often the

- Unesco, Research. Re1

Mass Media in Society, Need for ~. .~orts and Papers, No. 59.

Unes Co, gramme COM/MI

'0- -

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play a vital rôle in showing the ways in which communication can be activated in those sectors of the society which are in the greatest need of the "developing impulse", but are preciselythose which barely participate in matters of public in- terest. This, for example, is the case withrural people in so many countries.

to formulate a communication policy in each coun- try, and on the other, there is evidently the need for knowledge that only research can provide be- fore an adequate communication policy could be de- vised. Ideally, such a union of communication policy and communication research should be basedupon total knowledge of the communication process and on public needs rather than on partial knowledge and private needs, as is still too often the case. (

Given the need for communication research, what kind of research is today needed? Communi- cation research is essentially a field or "problem study area", which must rely on a wide variety of disciplines - a truly "multidisciplinary" ap- proach. Those who contribute the skills, con- cepts, theories and approaches of their own par- ticular disciplines can no longer refer solely to their ownlimited frames of reference. research approach needed here, psychologists, sociologists, educationalists, anthropologists, economists, literary critics, technologists and many others become members of teams concentrat- ing attention into completelyrealized problem areas.

Communication research should cover a21 aspects of the communication process - as an integral total process - not disembodying its essential elements and trying to study them dis- jointedly. Research approaches which compart- mentalize the communication process into separate segments are not only misleading, but lead to an imbalance throughout the whole research field. To adopt this more comprehensive view is not to imply, for example, that psychologists serve no purpose in tackling questions which deal specifi- cally with perception, language, cognitive devel- opment and so on. It does mean, however, that in what is essentially an interdisciplinary science, the various contributors should work together in subordination to a common plan and purpose aimed at improving our complete awareness and fullest understanding of this vitally important social and human phenomenon.

In summary, this modern communication- research approach should be motivated by two overriding considerations: to research communi- cation as a total process, and to study the media and the communication process in general within the wider social, political and economic setting. Only in this way is it possible to avoid the frag- mentation and imbalance of the past. Questions of control, ownership, support, resources, pro- duction, presentation, content, availability,

On the one hand there is thus a prerequisite

In the

exposure, access , consumption, us e, influence and overall consequences of communication can all be incorporated within such a general re- search framework.

Research proposals

Having established the foundation of socially rele- vant research - while continuing to recognize the essential and basic need for both theoretical so- phistication and improved methodology - Unesco shaped its proposals for an international pro- gramme of communication research into three main sections:(2)

Here the relationship between communication and development, as well as between national policies an.d communication strategies, is to be elaborated, mainly on a national basis, but in- cluding in- depth studies undertaken in specific priority areas. Such research, carried out na- tionally and co-ordinated at the national level, should ensure the cross- national comparability of the research studies involved, and should also enable the experience of one country to contri- bute to the better development planning and the communication strategy of another.

theme and programme is the sequence of the plan- ning process. In a changing society, communi- cation policy formulation and communication planning must be a dynamic process, which takes account at all times of the changing needs for the best means of communication most appropriate to that society. Also taken into account are the realities - possibilities and limitations - of all the media of communication - the economic, so- cial and moral effects of their development and application.

As the implementation of plans and pro- grammes takes place, there is the need for con- stant evaluation and assessment of operational processes and effects. The phasing of the over- all development of communication systems is al- so to be a continuous task, matching it to the needs as assumed under present and future na- tional policy. Such national policy itself is necessarily to be re- evaluated and reassessed by other researchers and planners.

Communication and planned social change -

The logical framework for this first research

Mass media and man's view of society - Here a multinational programme of communica- tion research is proposed calling for multidisci- plinary approach into a single, more universal problem area. This programme, calling for

(1) Tomo Martelanc, "Unesco Panel Charts 'Problem' Areas" Intermedia, International Broadcast Institute, No. 5, 1974, p. 8.

(2) Unesco, International Programme of Com- munication Research, COM/MD/20.

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multidisciplinary study, would seek to encourage a "linkage" of communication research institutes to co-ordinate and compare studies within the broad thematic framework of the "Mass media and man's view of society".

considerations here are intimately linked with the studies suggested as being desirable to assist in national policy formulation and planning. The "multinational quality" would be manifest in the CO- operation between nations and institutes in formulating the research, in order to ensure the comparability of the results of long- term studies of the whole of a communication process in anum- ber of different countries.

Research into international communication structures - Here some probing questions of the nature of international communication would be answered by international study in order to offer a broad framework into which national studies can logically fit. The whole prospect for inter- national communication is being decisively in- fluenced by the spectacular developments in new and evolving communication technology.

casting through satellites opens immense possi- bilities for wider distribution of communication far beyond geographical, political, ideological and cultural boundaries, while on the other hand, through such developments as cassettes, discs, facsimiles, CATV, individuals in more and more countries can have their range of communication - both the projection and the reception - choice tre- mendously increased, through an international marketing system, which would operate almost independently of national production capacities. The implications and effects - social, political, legal, cultural, moral, commercial, educational, etc., - are of enormous importance in the for- mulation of national communication policies and planning.

It is readily seen that many of the research

O n the one hand, for example, direct broad-

Exchange and use of information on research

The numbers and types of institutions engaged in some aspect of communication research vary con- siderably in different countries and regions. Often the structural links between them are not well formed. Production and research departments of the media, university faculties of the social sciences, researchunits of ministries of economic development, information, communication, edu- cation, statistical offices, etc., need to co-ordinate and direct their efforts to a problem-oriented in- quiry into the totality of the communication process.

tasks of communication research is to collect, collate and compare studies already done, with a view to arriving at international understanding among researchers on common denominators of

This has shown that one of the more urgent

methodology, terminology, theory, etc. Also, to avoid redundant effort, it was and is needed to know "who is doing what already", and to be able to exchange data and research findings.

mentation and information centres have been es- tablished and co-ordinated by Unesco, to promote and co-ordinate research and to ensure the dis- semination of research findings. In addition to acting as vital links in the exchange of informa- tion at the national levels, these centres are al- so part of a world-wide network for wider inter- national sharing of knowledge about mass com- munication.

One of these years we shall have computer- ized indices to this information, so that we can tell the computer terminals what topics wewant to know about, and receive in return a printout saying what is available and where we should look for it. W e shall also have micro- fiches readily available so that a user can order the reports he wants in a tiny film that can be made for a few cents and shipped in a small envelope. These will help. But the essence of the act of sharing and interpreting communication research is the training of persons to use and interpret it. "If w e solve that people problem, then w e are on the way toward solving the problem of making communication research useful. 'I( 1)

research (not just communication research), which concerns every nation, every university, every development organization, every mass medium that would like to see the resources of human knowledge used efficiently is that social research is not being put to as much practical use as it should and could. W e know more than we use and as a result we are inefficiently using resGces that are at least as valuable as financial capital or machine technology.

entists who have ever lived and published a re- search report are alive today. Perhaps 95 per cent of all communication researchers who have ever published are alive today and even though that total number is not overwhelming it is grow- ing quickly. of all kinds in print approximately doubles every ten years, and a substantial proportion of this is social research. The great libraries of the world have been doubling in size about every fourteen years. ing of findings, reports, and new researchers, still most of the output never enters into prac- tice or noticeably affects the world of the non- scholar.

To this end a small number of regionaldocu-

A major world problem - and common toall

-

It is estimated that 90 per cent of all thesci-

The amount of scientific research

Despite this enormous outpour-

(1) Wilbur Schramm, "An open letter to MEDIA ASIA readers", Media Asia, an Asian Mass Communication Quarterly, Vol. 1.

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This is not to imply that direct and practical utility is the only reason for research, or that every research must promptly be reflected in action. A basic researcher often does not know if or where a piece of his research may be of practical use. Nevertheless, it is a problem of conscience among many researchers. They see great social problems unsolved, the world- wide movement of development going forward less rapidly than it might. insights derived from intense and systematic study of man and society should be of help. energy - energy of a kind even more precious than petroleum or electricity - going so much to waste. And they ask why and what can be done about it?

One of the reasons for this problem, as ap- plied to the field of communication, might be the possibility that there may be too much informa- tion at any given place for a given user. While the scholar may enjoy this, it is a problem for the policy- maker, the planner, the programmer, the newsman or the field man. likely to have access to more than a tiny fraction of it.

An even more important part of the problem is the fact that social and psychological research is harder to apply to a practical problem than is

I phykiicql gpd chemical research. In neither case is it possible to apply research findings without considering the conditions of use. psychological research also has few universally applicable generalizations. When something is about human behaviour or human ideas or atti- tudes, this usually has to be qualified. research findings have been found to apply to a certain kind of person, in a certain kind of situa- tion when certain elements are present. Social research findings from one place at one timecan- not automatically be applied in another place at another time.

able resource of intellectual energy, but has been able to use only a small, sad proportion of it for the good of man. That is the key problem: wast- ing energy we badly need. II Wilbur Schramm, in addition to the above, makes a suggestion concern- ing what to do about it. munication is a people problem, not a thing prob- lem. solve it, so far as it is possible to solve, it will not be done by communication satellites or sun- light projectors or cheap printing processes or television or micro-fiche readers or even com- puters, although all of these may help. It is going to be solved by preparing the necessary people. "Middlemen" or "mediators" are the appropriate terms, because w e are essentially trying to bridge the gap between researchers and users, and in all the varying possible ways - for example, ''by building up a family of middlemen

They feel that some of the

They see

The latter are un-

Social and

Originally

"Social research, however, has a consider-

He thinks effective com-

He goes on to say that if w e are going to

rôles partly for carrying the findings and ex- perience of natural science and partly for social information, by giving planners and programmers in development agencies (and elsewhere) some little acquaintance with the methods of social re- search and the findings of communication research, working harder to share the findings of communi- cation research than to share the methods of this research, and by collection and documentation centres and services". ( 1)

It is difficult to talk in terms of ideal re- search structures, but it can be recommended without hesitation that all those who are'in a position to influence research policy - govern- ment, media councils, trusts, foundations, pro- fessional associations, etc. - should at least ask the following question when deciding on their research policies: What is the best way to allo- cate resources with a view to the solution of de- fined social problems?

Within this programme three courses of ac- tion stand out:

The collaborative linking of specialized com- munication research institutions which already have the capacity for such long-term, multidis- ciplinary, team- based inquiries, to undertake parallel programmes based upon a common de- sign. At present, these sorts of institutions are too scarce throughout the world and too little known to each other. Such inter- institutional CO- operation should be encouraged and fostered by international agencies and professional associa- tions. programmes designed in this way could receive more ready support from funding agencies.

search institutions are necessary both for national development and for international research. Having defined the research tasks, and the insti- tutional ''gaps" which prevent the carrying out of these tasks, thought will have to be given to the creation of specialized institutions which can do the necessarywork. In some cases, international or bilateral advice and technical assistance may be requested to help in the setting up of appropriate institutional structures and training the neces- sary research manpower.

such specialized communication research insti- tutions assume a regional function, backing up national centres with additional specialized ex- pertise not readily available locally, or substi- tuting for them where they do not exist. example, qualified communication planners and communication systems analysts are at present very rare people, as are creative research de- signers able to adapt methodologyand research tech- niques to cultural climates and local conditions.

Well worked-out CO- operative research

More such specialized communication re-

In some cases, it may be necessary that

For

(1) Wilbur Schramm, ibid.

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Regional research and planning centres could as- sist national policy and research councils by pro- viding the assistance of these specialists to work with country teams to train counterparts within them. Regional meetings on communication policy -

soon to be convened - should urgently study the necessity for such regional communication research centres and propose appropriate action for their establishment.

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Chapter 4

Communication po I i ci es

Social structures evolve within the framework of the methods of communication available to society at any given time. Consequently, new and evolv- ing social structures and technological develop- ments make possible new and evolving individual and social opportunities and rights. The modern communications explosion demands a clearer and even new philosophy and approach to communica- tion issues, that is, newer communication policies for the reshaping of both national and international communication and social structures(l). Every society already has existing communication poli- cies, as no State can exist without them. Commu- nication policies - either explicit in legislations, constitutions, codes of conduct, rules and proced- ures or implicit in accepted practices - exist at the national, institutional and professional levels. They are, however, usually latent, fragmented and unco-ordinated, rather than clearly articulated and harmonized.

Since such partial communication policies exist in every society, what is proposed is an ex- plicit statement and deliberately prospective for- mulation of practices already, often, generally established in society. The elaboration of com- munication policies proceeds, therefore, simul- taneously, from the analysis and acknowledgement of existing practices, and the formulationof new principles and norms suited to the attainment of desirable future goals: the blending of pragmatic experience of the past and forward-looking. Rec- ognizing the great differences in social and econ- omic conditions as well as political systems throughout the world, one cannot conceive onlya single approach but rather hope to indicate key factors which should be considered applicable within the context of each country and region.

Communication policies may be very general, in the nature of desirable goals and principles, or they may be more specific and practically binding. They may exist or be formulated at many levels. They may be incorporated in the constitution or

legislation of a country, in overall nationalpoli- cies, in the guidelines for individual administra- tions, professional codes of ethics, as wellas in the constitution and operation of particular com- munication systems, both governmental and non- governmental. gional, national or sub-national dimensions.

or another dealt with communication policies. Some have established permanent or ad hoc or- gans to advise on or deal with minor or major components of such policies. If they are, by chance, not part of the declared government ob- jectives, they may yet implicitly exist in the es- tablished relationships between government and institutions, be they broadcasting companies, newspapers, publishing houses, professional bodies, etc.

National communication policy measures are presently and typically drafted in a host of different ministries and agencies. A telecommu- nications agency (PTT) may handle policy and plans for telephone and telegraph development (for example, the important subject of radiofre- quency allocation), while broadcasting itself is frequently the province of a completely autono- mous organization, or of a Ministry of Informa- tion and Broadcasting which may concern itself, in addition, with certain segments of the publish- ing industry, such as the press. Ministries of Education and Culture are concerned with a wide variety of audio-visual and publishing activities, while the judicial branch may involve itself with problems of copyright, slander and libel. The motion picture industry may come under varying degrees of control and local government scrutiny.

Ministries of Science and Technology, as well as those concerned with the development of com- merce and industry, have policies and activities

They may have world-wide, re-

All national governments have at one time

(1) Unesco, Meeting of Experts on Communica- tion Policies and Planning, C O M / M D / ~ ~ .

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which significantly influence the capacity and availability of the "hardware" which constitutes the technical basis of the media. Foreignminis- tries may be involved in such international aspects of communications as agreement on the establish- ment and operation of facilities and the interna- tional exchange of news and programme materials. In many instances, the military branches of gov- ernment,by the sheer complexity and size of their communications requirements, exert a significant influence pn national communications structures. At the same time, there are numerous non- governmental communication enterprises - news- papers, motion picture companies, broadcasting organizations, etc. which have their own inter- nal policies, although they might be operating, more or less, within the framework of official policies.

It is all too often the case that each of these policy-making, planning, system- building and system-operating activities go on independently. Duplication of facilities and staffs can be the rule rather than the exception as agencies and organi- zations with similar needs proceed unwittingly, or occasionally intentionally, unmindful of the plethora of competing efforts. At the same time that communication activities and policy-making responsibilities are becoming more broadly dis- persed in the government structure, the propor- tion of public funds which is invested in commu- nication is oftentimes also increasing, but the people's ability to effectivelymanage this invest- ment is decreasing.

A programme of publishing a series of mono- graphs on communication policies of Member States was initiated by Unescoin1971(1). Its ob- jective was to promote an awareness of the con- cept of communication policies at the governmental, institutional and professional levels through the analyses by Member States of policies as they exist within their countries.

At the national level, communication policies were here defined as the "sum total of the con- scious and deliberate usages, action (or lack of action) in a society aimed at meeting certain com- munication needs through the optimum utilization of the ph sical and human resources available to

on the institutionalization of communication meaia and functions. It also entails control to an extent which ensures that these institutions' operations are directed towards the public good.

The agreed format for these studies specifies that after an outline of the concept of communica- tion policy and the description of the system of mass communication within the socio-economic and cultural structures of the country, the place of mass media in the national society should be analysed on three different levels - the public one, which is based on existing legislation, an

society'' P 2). National policy involves decisions

analysis of the organization and functioning of the media institutions and their performance; and the place which those forming part of the media professionplay in society. It is important here to remember that these, and other, commu- nication policies studies examine their countries' policies as they existed at the time of the study. It is quite possible that countries, having com- pleted this first step of analysis, will see the need for muchmore critical studies in the future.

Communication policies - dimensions and concerns

"Communication policies are sets of principles and norms established to guide the behaviour of communication systems. "(3) Their orientation is fundamental and long-range, although they have operational implications of short-range sig- nificance. They are shaped in the context of so- ciety's general approach to communication. Emanating from political ideologies, the social and economic conditions of the country and the values on which they are based, they strive to relate these to the real needs and prospective opportunities of "communication".

One way of describing the dimensions which enclose the vast volume of what is involved in communication policies - and planning - would include the following: the communication system, its components and

the functions of the system; the "clients" or audience using the system,

structures;

dif- ferentiated according to age groups, socio- economic strata, sex, occupations, urban/ rural, persuasions, etc. ;

the types of information carried by the system and its components, including news, entertain- ment, general information, education, music,

Unesco, Communication Policies in Hungary, by Tamas Szecski and Gabor Fedor, Paris, 1974. Unesco, Communication Policies in Ireland, by John Stapleton, Paris, 1974. Unesco, Communication Policies in the Federal Republic of Germany, by Walter Mahler and Rolf Richter, Paris, 1974. Unesco, Communication Policies in Sweden, by Lars Furhoff, Lenart Jönsson and Lenard Nilsson, Paris, 1974. Unesco, Communication Policies in Yugo- slavia, by Mirodrag Autamovic, Stevan

~

Marjanovic and Prvoslav Ralic, Paris, 1975. Unesco, Working Notes for Meeting of Co- ordinators of Communication Policy Studies in EuroDe. Paris. 22 SeDtember 1971, P. 2. . . - Unesco, Report of the Experts on Communi- cation and Planning, COM/MD/24. p. 8.

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data, conversation, opinion, cultural forms, etc. ;

the values and qualities or" the content of that in- formation, such as truth, objectivity, relevance, educational effectiveness, violence, humour, sex, libel, etc.;

functions, its audience, the types of informa- tion and its qualities, including political, legis- lative, social, ethical, technical, economic, management, constitutions, laws, by-laws, codes, norms and standards, researchfindings, national, local, institutional, professional levels.

a variety of considerations about the system, its

Compounding the elements of each of these dimensions produces a large and complex number of policy/planning areas, many of which are im- portant in any particular country.

nication policy, the various areas of concern in policy formulation must be seen in order that it may proceed as a systematic exercise. Formu- lation of communication policies requires consid- eration, identification and determination of the following:

The scope of specific communication systems (geographic coverage, target populations). Poli- cies may have national scope, affect all countries or at least concern several countries of a region. But within national policies, or side by side with them, they may equally be relevant to specific segments of the population (particular geographic areas, or people sharing ethnic, linguistic, occu- pational and other characteristics).

Hence the first task is to identify the charac- teristics of the people involved in a communica- tion system, and especially the "audiences" it is aimed at. This area of concern may be taken for granted, for example, the entire nation is the au- dience, but frequently such a global approach will prove illusory and detrimental to meeting the many communication needs of different parts of the population. There may be a need to consider var- ious minorities or even majorities, which under prevailing conditions do not have adequate access to communication, for example, rural populations, the lower working classes, women. In this con- nexion, it is equally important to consider whois presently left outside existing communicationpoli- cies. The non-audiences or excluded audiences may be as significant for policies as the presumed audiences themselves.

The principles and norms, that is, the values which underlie the nature, functions and needs of society and guide - or should guide - the behaviour of the communication system. Comrnunication sys- tems may be seen to imply value orientations in two different senses: One set of values involves the structure of a communication system which inevitably has repercussions on its social functions

To formulate any new and integrated commu-

and the content of its messages; thesevalues be- come apparent in response to such questions as, is it a one-way or two-way system, does itpro- mote the possibilities of feedback and of multi- lateral communication, which is its relative in- dependence from political and economic strains and pressures, how responsive may it be to di- vergencies of interests and opinions in society? The second set of values concerns the flow of messages within a communication system, the normative criteria on which the selection and formulation of messages is based.

munication systems are not merely channels from established power centres to the general public as a "target", it should be askedwhether the values governing the structures of commu- nication institutions make it possible for the general public to be equally a source of commu- nication, whether these values safeguard the right of the individual to communicate, permit general access to the system and allow for feed- back. critical assessment of the control of communi- cation systems and their potential service to the many minorities which make up the majority of opinion and interest of the people.

Much the same can be said about theprocess of "gate-keeping" that normally goes on in all communication institutions as they make decisions on what information is to be established, and what information is not to be published, as well as on how to present that information.

As to the values involved in the actual flow of communication content, it should be stressed that policy considerations may only touch upon those messages which are - or should be - de- signed for public consumption, as is normally characteristic of the mass media and those kinds of data which are of public origin, as in the ex- change of information among data banks. Other messages, such as private correspondence and telephone calls, lie outside the scope of commu- nication policies, strictly speaking. A consider- ation of the value orientation of content does not imply or suggest detailed control of content. At- tention is focused on the identification and deter- mination of the values reflected in the long-term flow of messages.

should arise from the basic values of humanlife, as expressed, for example, in the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights", focused by respec- tive political ideologies, and concretizedin those values which determine the social, economic, educational and cultural life of the country. Such values are not always fixed, but often evolve with the constant mutation of values in response to changing social needs and public opinion.

Since there is growing awareness that com-

Another value criterion arises in the

Values relevant to communication policies

Value criteria may also be important in

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formulating policies concerning the relationship between national and foreign communication sys- tems. should be protected and find expression? What are the values which underlie the present flow of information to and from the country? What other values should be pursued and in what manner? What values should guide programmes aimed to- wards other countries and international programme exchange and dis semination?

In identifying and determining the values in- volved in communication, the social functions of communication will have to be faced, as one es- sential consideration in the determination of nor- mative values is the impact which communication exercises on society and its individuals. Since social functions of communication imply needs for communication, the identification and deter- mination of values for the communication system imply simultaneous consideration of social values, social functions and social needs.

How many national values - and cultures -

The manageable elements - material and hu- man - of communication systems, which consti- tute the essential components of communication strategies and planning. Within the total flow of communication, those elements will have to be identified which seem best suited for the imple- mentation of policies. A number of separate, though interrelated fields are suggested as a framework, it being understood that these fields need to be related to the value criteria indicated above, and that they will have repercussions on those aspects of the communication process which are not directly manageable. Such a comprehen- sive view obviously is filled with a quantity and diversity of detail, the analysis of which requires a staggering amount of expertise, time and re- sources. In practice, it is notpossible to formu- late and apply policies, unless major areas of interest have been identified. The question might be asked in each instance: which are the signifi- cant and manageable "leverage points" where the application of communication policies is likely to have the widest impact and the greatest long- range effectiveness ?

The critical assessment of the control of com- munication systems, as: has already been mentioned in another context, is an eminent structural con- cern of communication policies. not only general constraints on the communication system - political considerations, economic incen- tives, response to audience preferences, orienta- tion towards social functions, but also an analysis of the values underlying decision-making in the communication institutions themselves.

A second aspect of policy related to structures and management concerns the technical facilities by which messages are produced, disseminated and received; these resources are often referred to as the l'hardware'' of communication systems.

This involves

Consideration of hardware is not limited to an identification and determination of the technical means which fit into the scope of the communi- cation system in question. "Technical resources" may also imply the production, import and sale of the equipment. Furthermore, certain aspects of the broader communication resources - technical infrastructure - of the country are involved, for example, electrification, transports, etc., as far as they are directly related to the establishment and operation of communication facilities.

A third aspect is the administrative structures which govern individual communication systems and the overall CO- ordination and planning of com- munication. It is vital to specify the type of control involved in every part of the system, to determine what are the dominant management considerations, for example, public service or commercial, and to establish the rôle of governmental, parliamentary, administrative and other public institutions. It is also significant topolicy-makers to find out what are the lines of command and how responsive the sys- tem is to influence and reactions from other fields of interest - for example, education, agriculture, cul- tural affairs - and from the users or recipients themselves.

institutions is equally a responsibility which can- not be left simply to independent initiative. Each country, as an integral part of its communication policy, has to foresee what types of professionals are to be trained, in what numbers and at what levels. Only in that manner can balance be secured between the real availability of suchpro- fessionals and the actual and potential require- ments of the communication system they are to operate. Moreover, training should not be solely concentrated on production/ distribution skills; it ought to give also proper consideration to the country's needs for researchers and trainers in communication skills.

tems are an evident preoccupation for policy- makers. tive costs and benefits of public expenditures on communication. But it goes beyond, because even where no public funds are involved, the economics of communication enterprises have an impact on the economy of the country as a whole and a direct influence on the content and social function of the media. In fact, many of the pur- poses of communication policies may be attained through economic and financial measures.

Closely linked are the legal conditions which govern communication enterprises and influence those who may have access to them or find expression through them. An assessment and overt acknowl- edgement of existing legal rights, obligations and restraints is one basis for the elaboration of future communication policies. Beyond the general legal

Manpower and training for the communication

The economics governing communication sys-

This includes in the first place the rela-

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framework are specific legalissues, such as copy- right and performers' rights, international law, labour legislation, taxation, etc.

The above list is not intended to be exhaustive. It is an indication of different and important as- pects which policy-makers must take into con- sideration when they focus their attention on com- munication systems.

Participation in communication policy formu- lation - who is involved? A verypertinent question is "Who is concerned with communicationpolicies and their formulation? 'l. Communication policies, because of their wide scope, require responsible participation at many different levels:

Government executive. Since communication cuts across established administrations and is a political factor, experience in other fields indi- cates that the basic orientation of policies, and the co-ordination required for their concretiza- tion and translation into planning, calls for en- dorsement by the highest authorities of the State. Because many media are economical only when applied on a large scale and integrated into the total process of social communication, co- ordination needs to be reflected throughout the political and administrative hierarchy. This is rarely possible unless authorized from the top. At the same time, it is important that the concepts of communication policy and communication plan- ning should not be equated with constraint and censorship, with "dirigism at the top". O n the contrary, both should be concerned with assuring individual freedom of expression and communica- tion within systems which are compatible with the needs for social dialogue.

Legislative bodies play an important rale both through the laws concerning communication matters they may adopt and through the allocation of budget- ary resources. Unless there is understanding of the significance of communication among legisla- tors and close co-operation with others, there is little prospect for achieving the desired co- ordination and assuring the constructive rale of communication in society. Sub-commissions on communicationpolicies and planning may be a use- ful matter for legislative bodies to consider.

Authorities in charge of social and economic planning. Co- ordination of communication sys- tems, integration into the social and economic objectives of the country, and allocation of im- portant resources required for a rational devel- opment of communication infrastructures call for decisions by the planning authorities.

Individual ministries and their planning boards refer not only to those ministries directly in charge of communication resources and their use, but also to all other ministries whicharein- volved in some form of communication and are potential users of the media - education, agricul- ture, labour, health, etc., as well as the technical

and social services which depend on them or op- erate with relative independence in their domains. Experience has shown that the integration of media into substantive fields such as education or agriculture, is likely to remain marginal un- less it is provided for in the specific planningof these fields. Since the Ministry of Finance will directly affect the development and use of media through the fiscal and customs policies, it may be equally concerned at the planning level.

Communication enterprises. In the first place, the ''mass media", but also telecommuni- cations, data storage and retrieval, as well as the industries which produce the required hard- ware and can supply software, such as informa- tion and programmes to the media systems.

Professional organizations, whose members are involved directly in the media - professional associations, labour unions - as well as the in- dustries which include staff of academic, train- ing and research institutions concerned with com- munication. They exist in all countries and the situations vary according to the structure of the different media. While most of these haveas a first aim the protection of their conditions of work, many of them are also concerned with maintaining professional and technical standards. There also exist international federations of na- tional associations, as well as of individuals, of professional and technical workers in the mass media intended to assist the members and topro- mote co-operation between them. Such profes- sional organizations (at whatever level),and when they function well, play an important rale in im- proving technical efficiency and in cultivating among their members recognition of the rale of the mass media and of their own responsibilities.

The citizen has a direct stake in communica- tion policies. The values and choices whichguide communication affect his personal interest. He is a communicator in his own right and requires access to the media for participation and expres- sion. tia1 services of communication - objective infor- mation, education, vocational orientation and training, satisfaction of leisure time and cultural identity. There are different ways in which the citizen may influence communication policies - through representation, through voluntary organi- zations which.are directly concerned with the con- tent and conduct of the media or represent social and cultural forces who seek access to communica- tion, through forms of direct action and through public debate (including debate through the media). The methods for citizen participation will vary among societies, but its importance cannot be emphasized enough.

contribution to the formulation of communication policies by supplying both quantifiable and

He should be able to benefit from thepoten-

The social scientist can make an essential

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non-quantifiable information on the structure of society as well as on the content and impact of the messages carried by the communication system.

The rale of the economist is crucial though confined. He sees himself as a rationalistin the multidisciplinary policy-making process and at- tempts to organize and bring consistency to it. His effort entails continuous attempts to encourage de cision- makers to adopt organized approaches to decision-making and to return to basic data for each decision. His job is, then, to develop im- proved techniques for collecting data and analys- ing the results in terms which can readilybeused by those who make policy decisions. nication economist should be capable not only of evaluating the alternatives presented to him by others, but of widening the range of alternative methods of achieving a given objective. He is also expected to define the cost and benefit impli- cations of various sets of objectives and to trace least-cost strategies for policy-makers and plan- ners. He cannot, however, be expected to make the final choices among policy objectives, or to formulate definitive plans.

sider is the setting up of a national policy council, as a national body - among others - for organiza- tion, co-ordination and control of the communica- tion research programme, and as machinery re- quired for the effective implementation of commu- nication policies and for the translation of these into planning strategies.

While not the only way to go about the taskof assuring public participation in the formulation of policies, a communication policy council could certainly provide a forum for discussions and could identify priority areas and key positions, and could clear the way for eventual implementa- tion. Such a council is likely to be the firstoppor- tunity for a meeting of minds among all concerned and the gathering of information from the many fields involved. The council could assign research tasks, collate information and stimulate explora- tory discussions at many levels; subsequently it may elaborate policies or advise thereon for gov- ernment and the communication institutions.

A communication policy council will only be able tooperate effectively if it is given long-range status and the necessary finance and personnel. Since decisions in the communication fields are likely to condition development for many years to come, they need to be well prepared and con- sidered. This requires that the communication council has considerable stability although its membership may, of course, be regularly re- freshed. Since research and assembly of data is a costly process which requires specialists and appropriate facilities so that academic insti- tutions, economic and statistical services and others may be commissioned to gather and

The commu-

A useful beginning for governments to con-

analyse the required information, special finan- cial allocations are necessary, The council itself will need staff, office space and funds.

The constitution of the council requires there- fore important policy decisions by the authorities, decisions which in themselves will raise basic issues about the importance and rale of commu- nication policies. Whether these decisions will be taken by the executive or the legislative, whether finance will come only from public funds or also from interested communication agencies and academic institutions, whether additional re- sources can be found with foundations and inter- national agencies, is a matter to be explored from case to case.

character and be charged with regular reporting to decision-making bodies. given certain executive competence. they should consist of leaders in the field ofpoli- tics, specialists in administration, media prac- titioners, communication research scientists and other s.

The principal functions of such a council would be:(l) to promote coherent, national and comprehensive analyses of existing policies and controls and of national communication objectives; to identify the rights, interests, obligations and interde- pendence of various communication institutions within society;

to enhance greater efficiency in the application and expenditures of frequently limited economic and physical resources by setting priorities and reducing internal contradictions;

to safeguard the rights and interests of various sectors involved in communication enterprises by providing a forum for continuous discussion and clarification;

in media technology, assessing their value for promoting national and international goals, and revealing their harmful effects; to perform a look-out function to foresee technological inno- vations on the international scene which may be important as quantum jumps in national com- munication planning;

to identify important international communication policy issues which are constraints on national policy;

to ensure national compatibility with international norms and standards;

to enable the nation to speak consistently and co- herently at international discussions of commu- nication matters, and to recommend appropri- ate diplomatic action on questions involving international communication.

These councils may initially have an advisory

They may also be In principle,

to provide the framework for anticipating changes

- (1) Unesco, Meeting of Experts on Communica-

tionPolicies andPlannina. COM/MD/24. u. 19.

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Finland is an early example of one nation's attempt to establish a commission for future com- munication policies. In the early 1970s, Finland set up a "committee to consider the initiatives which the State should take on problems of mass communication, and to draw up an administrative model for a State body handling communications policy matters in a centralized manner"(1).

This committee reported that in the next few years, development in the mass media field would demand increasing initiative on the part of the State.

In the proximate years ahead, both a qualita- tive and a structural change were anticipated in the communications field, where presently Finland's biggest problems for the traditional media are linked with distribution, expense and slowness. Development was seen as heading for the most ef- ficient and cheapest means of distribution, that is, electric transmission by wire or tele-distribution, including not only television distribution but other uses such as facsimile, the transmission of data impulses from one computer to another, etc. The electronic and cable network envisioned was to be able to transmit mass information towide sections of the audience - individual citizens with all their communications requirements, and both public in- stitutions and private business. An extremely heavy financial investment would be needed. A development with such wide implications for the whole field of communications assumed the pro- duction of an overall plan by the State authority.

In accordance with the facts established by

this study committee, the Finnish Council of State decided on 28 June 1972 to set up a Commission for Communication Policy, to map out the prob- lems which surround mass communication opera- tions and the initiative-taking they required from the State, and to draw up plans to resolve them. The task of this Commission was: to study the structure and economic state of the Finnish press, and draft a proposal on the or- ganizations of press support,

to study to which measures the State should resort so that a news agency with a sufficient standard of service for all the media can be maintained, and to analyse what administrative adjustments could be seen as promoting State support,

to elucidate the development of communications techniques and to draw up a proposal for State measures towards this end,

to analyse questions of copyright and international law surrounding the new forms of masscom- munication,

communications policy matters in the State ad- ministration, and the making of proposals to which this would give rise; in examining the need for this centralization and in drawing up policy proposals, the Committee was also to take account of those forms of communication which were not included in its assignments.

to study the need for centralization in handling

(1) Government of Finland, Memorandum, Office of the Council of State, Helsinki, June 1972.

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Chapter 5

From policies to planning

Communication planning can only take place within the context of communication policies(1). It com- prises action required for the establishment and operation of integrated and functional communica- tion systems in society. Ideally, it would relate the process of communication to social and econo- mic planning, to political and cultural options, to the application of communication in many fields which need it, but are generally not directly en- gaged in the operation of communication media. It would relate mediated communication to inter- personal communication, and it would incorporate the latter where it is directly related to the media, for example, group discussion, feedback, research.

It would co-ordinate and project the mediated communication process as a whole to make the most effective and economical use of all available channels. It would project and might determine the operation of individual media both through action at the governmental level, for example, the introduction of television or satellite communi- cation, and more specifically through promotion of action at the level of the individual institutions, for example, broadcasting organizations, press .

services, cinema enterprises, etc.

embraces : the development of an infrastructure for the dissemination of information; and administrative framework for communication systems; the establishment and utilization of the media of communication and the means of public participation and feedback; the creation of pro- fessional institutions; nel. and be based on research. The telecommunica- tions infrastructure will be designed to meet the projected demands, among others, of the mass media in their various forms and of the network for data transmission between documentation centres and scientific institutions.

The planning of integrated communication systems is also a multidisciplinary exercise.

Communication planning, in its wide sense,

the legal

and the training of person- Plans should respond to the needs for users

It involves authorities concerned with informa- tion, broadcasting, education, culture, economic planning, telecommunications, agricultural devel- opment and health education as well as media enterprises and communication professionals.

While the development of communication systems has normally involved planning, the evidence of a plan may not always be obvious, nor may long-range objectives always be clear to those responsible for early planning. With the multiplication of communication systems, a statement of overall objectives for the use of media may often become a necessity, particu- larly for those societies which expect a great deal from the application of the new technologies.

A major feature of communication activities in most parts of the world is the poverty of mech- anisms for co-ordinating and planning diverse components, or for taking into account complex interdependencies between communication and other fields of activity. Given the rapid devel- opment and spread of new technological means of communication - which may make it possible to reconfigure the flow of ideas and influence in our societies, the feeling is that the increased benefits of treating communications as a coher- ent field of concern would more than offset the considerable cost of analysis.

Strategic and operational planning

Planning usually begins with a statement of goals. Where do we intend to go? Why? Only then can it be determined by what possible routes can we get there. The answers will depend on where we are now - which is our starting point? The latter in turn is approached or answered by communica- tion research.

(1) Unesco. Reuort of the Meetinn on Manaee- I Y

ment and Planning of New Communication Systems, COM/MD/29, Paris, 28 March 1974.

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Beyond policies and within communication planning, both strategic(l1 and operational plan- ning processes have been identified(2). Strategic planning determines the alternative ways to achieve long-range goals and sets the frame of reference for shorter-range operational planning; it trans- lates into qualified targets and systematic ap- proaches the general objectives of communication policies.

and structures of communication technologies are bound to have effects for many years to come, it is important that they be made within the frame- work of a long-term strategic plan. the introduction of television into a country; the step-by-step establishment of a ground-based communication network; lite communication; the setting-up of paper, printing or electronic industries - all these, and others, help to determine the long-range future of communication in a country. Similarly, decisions taken about the legal structure, the finance and the public responsibilities of communication media are equally likely to condition future practices to such a degree that they should be decided upon not only in the light of general policies, but also withinthe framework of strategic planning, which seeks to direct the development of communication towards the desirable goals of society and at the same time to avoid undue overlapping and economic wastage.

Because of the varying traditions, philoso- phies and aspirations of different societies, it is not thought possible, at this stage, to develop any generalized models for the elaboration of strategic plans in the Communication Sector, although it can be suggested that future research work should be concentrated towards such a possibility.

which individual countries would choose interme- diary positions are noted: the intrusions of planning on communication ser- vices exclusively when the emergence of new technologies requires regulation and definition, or when broad new communication services are required which will not be provided by a market economy;

the integrated, centralized planning of the Com- munication Sector in all its dimensions as an essential part of the political and state-building process.

Since decisions concerning the implementation

For example,

the eventual use of satel-

Generally, two diametric positions between

In reality, strategic planning of communica- tion takes place under certain constraints which operate to a greater or lesser degree in all societies. One difficulty encountered in long- term strategic plans is due to the rapid changes in technology and consumer attitudes. Another difficulty is that the goals, objectives and social functions for communication may require modifi- cation with changing economic and social conditions.

A further difficulty arises from the fact that com- munication inevitably involves a blending of pub- lic and personal initiatives. Very often multiple objectives are being presented. tion media are not simply providing a specific service or product; variety of demands from economic, social, politi- cal and creative points of view. dures therefore have to be devised to accommo- date this variety of objectives and to consider future technological developments.

constraints should not be an argument to the point where governments and media enterprises neglect or reject the importance of strategic planning, otherwise a situation arises in which long-term commitments are made without due consideration of their implications. These are decisions which require public acknowledgement and deliberate choice; clusively to the initiative of engineers, lawyers or other concerned specialists.

There are vital strategic planning decisions which directly affect operational planning. Some of these are: short-range projects of long- range significance, such as those concerning training and research and the integration of com- munication into education; professional training centres; communication faculties in academic institutions; provisions not only for the use of technology in education, but also for conveying a better under- standing of communication and the ability to ex- press oneself through modern technology. All of these require basic commitments which will be effective for years to come.

Operational planning translates policies and strategic plans into the commitment of material and human resources; into administrative and operational structures; into categories of pro- gramme output and ways of involvement beyond the production/distribution process itself (co-ordination with other agencies, reception, feedback). It cov- ers recruitment and training of manpower and CO- operation with specialists or institutions which may contribute essential services - technical

The communica-

they will have to accept a

Planning proce-

At the same time, it is emphasized that such

they cannot be left ex-

the establishment of the setting up of

(1) The term "strategic planning" carries, par- ticularly in the context of communication planning, a certain connotation of manipula- tion, or at least the potential for manipula- tion. Since, however, the possibility of manipulation cannot be denied, it is thought preferable to retain this term in spite of this connotation, in order more fully to reflect the real situation.

(2) Unesco, Meeting of Experts on Communica- tion Policies and Plannina. COM/MD /24. U. ~ I ~ , - . Paris, 1973.

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institutes, industry, statistical and research ser- vices, etc.

Strategic and operational planning are one continuous process, not merely the drafting of plans which are presumed to be definitive. While one plan is being applied, the next one is in prep- aration, and there is continual feedback from this preparation to actual operation in the light of changing needs and technologies. This is, of course, a primary responsibility of "management", but management will need the advice and guidance of professional communication planners.

Conceptually, it would be most satisfactory if action could go successively through the stages of policies, strategies, operational planning and budgeting. In reality, however, planning and operational application can precede the formula- tion of policies. gies particularly striking in the communication field, the initiatives of powerful enterprises, either publicly or privately owned and externally generated, and the immediate needs of communi- cation networks to extend their range and improve their quality lead to action wherein the long-range effects have never been considered. and regulatory agencies often are not aware of the fact that their decisions, made within a limited context to achieve immediate ends, may deter- mine the future of communication for decades to come. If operational planning and policies are not co-ordinated, considerable wastage and con- flict may result.

In this involved relationship between the dif- ferent aspects of policy and planning at the central and operational levels, as well as the constraints which communication policies and planning would have to respect in different societies, there is a constant danger of too much compartmentalization. Rational administration does require division of labour and responsibilities, but not to the detri- ment of effective and innovative action. Innova- tion requires breaking through traditional, intel- lectual, administrative compartmentalization. This is particularly important in the field of communication.

It is necessary to step forward (when neces- sary cautiously), from present practices to future policies and decisions for practical implementa- tion. In this process, there is need for continu- ous feedback between the different elements in the policy-planning-implementation chain. If policy-makers, strategists and operational plan- ners are separated from each other in any impor- tant respect, results are likely to be contradictory and may be counter-productive.

Communication policies are largely a matter which must be dealt with at the central level of a country, while planning, especially operational planning, should be much closer to the operation of individual media enterprises, and thus has to

The emergence of new technolo-

Engineers

be far more decentralized. Operational planning can only be undertaken by those who hold direct responsibility for the operation of communication media. While not denying the importance of cen- trally adopted communication policies, at the same time such division should do justice to the complexity of the communication process and the need to incorporate policies into the operation of each individual sub-system.

Basic parameters, difficulties, constraints, problem areas and institutional issues will be encountered in the communication planning pro- cess. Planning assumes different characteris- tics according to the political, social and organi- zational environment in which it is executed. centrally-planned societies, the planning process tends to adopt different forms in different sectors (including communication) for different geographic areas and for different spans of time - long-, medium- and short-term planning. In countries where multiple ownership/control patterns pre- vail, different points of interrelation are very likely to exist between strategic and operational planning approaches. The features of both pat- terns, combined with the specific problems of a particular country, can also be found. In the end, each country, whether developed or devel- oping, must work out its own best strategy and planning.

media may be made at various levels in the struc- ture controlling and directing the media, whether it is a government or a private agency. tional planning, on the other hand, is typically carried out by the media workers themselves - usually in response to audience needs and recom- mendations while functioning within the existing political and legal parameters. Thus, in the communication planning process, at both the strategic and operational levels, a good deal of adaptability is required, which acknowledges and reconciles a number of practical constraints.

Communication systems for educational pur- poses, for example, include the following speci- fic needs and objectives: planning and control; production and presentation; transmission, replication or distribution; administration and administrative co-ordination; tutorial guidance and leadership; the determination of observable responses and active learning; feedback chan- nels and continuous evaluation; and, mainten- ance and regeneration of the whole system. At both the planning and implementation stages, channels, institutions, agencies and facilities have to be provided to answer all these functions. At the same time, this description of an educa- tional communication system may also be rele- vant when defining the essential concepts and con- siderations in the strategic planning process related to the wider global view of communication.

In

As stated previously, strategic plans for the

Opera-

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The elements included within planning for communication are mostly similar to those in- cluded in other contexts of planning mechanisms and management approaches, such as will be found in any development planning context. importantly, it depends upon the precision with which objectives are formulated at the strategic planning stage, where the contradictions and in- consistencies are recognized and, if appropriate, eliminated.

often be produced. There may be a tension between the economic objective - to be self- supporting or to make a profit, and the social objective - to encourage certain changes in atti- tude or behaviour. There may equally be a ten- sion between the financial and administrative objectives - to operate efficiently with an economy of resources, and the psychological and artistic demand of the writer or producer to be as free as possible of external pressures and constraints.

Differences in orientation and background, as between different units and personnel involved in different parts of the communication process, may also produce tensions or misunderstanding. Certain disciplines, for example, those involved in feedback and evaluation, have an academic derivation, which is often very different from that of the producer or distributor. This can lead not only to a breakdown in communication between different parts of the system, but also to inappropriate design procedures being adopted within sub-systems .

in approaching planning and implementation. Decisions are frequently taken by political and legislative agencies which are not directly in- volved in the planning chain. Any model of the planning process must take account of such ran- dom inputs.

It has also to be realized that more precise and cogent communication planning has a radical effect on societies, and on all the sectors of which they are a part. A call upon communication me- dia to promote national development and integra- tion may trigger off a later demand actually to remodel the development process. The ability of audiences to feed back reactions through an improved communication technology may gener- ate a demand for revision of the political system itself.

More

In this situation, a number of tensions may

The political factor too must not be forgotten

The planning process: the need for data

One logical and realistic framework for a national communication research programme is the se- quence of the planning process. As it was stressed in the previous chapters, communication research. can provide a picture of the communication pat- tern of society not yet generally available and,

once a government possesses such data, it can re- fine very considerably its national policies and adjust its development plans and operations far more closely than it can possibly do today.

within a nation will involve the following('): The collection of basic data and a systematic analy- sis of the country upon such bases as population densities, geographic limitations to communica- tion, variety of social structures, ecology and agriculture, transportation, physical communi- cations, mobility of population, electrification. industrial capacity, manpower, capacity, etc.

The production of an inventory of the present com- munication resources, including modern and traditional media and analyses of the variety of present communication structures. Such an in- ventory should also include the study of the audience, its communication consumption pat- terns, etc.

The critical analysis of present communication policies - or lack of policies - including such considerations as ownership, structures, decision-making, etc.

The critical analysis of the communication needs of each society, especially in relationship with the existing social and communication struc- tures and the uses to which communication is put.

The analysis of the communication components in all aspects of the national development plans and programmes, in order to ascertain the com- munication requirements of the programmes - the communication capacity which is essential to the execution of the plan. These needs must then be reconciled with the means and capacity available.

An analysis of the constraints on communication developments and structures.

The definition of aims, objectives of future com- munication policies. The study of future needs and the projection of possible strategies and the structures to support them and the design of alternative approaches including their require- ments for personnel, hardware, finance, re- search, training, commensurate with the values and goals of the society.

The analysis of the economic, social, cultural, educational relevance of the alternative com- munication strategies and structures and upon the basis of ail these various scales of rele-

,' vance making the choices which are necessary to implement plans and programmes.

The phasing of overall development of communica- tion systems in a logical sequence matching the

The processes of planning of communication

(1) Unesco, COM/MD/ZO, and Unesco, Revised midelines for the economic evaluation of na- tional communication systems, Co~/wS/366, Paris, February 1974.

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needs as assumed under present and future conditions as part of national development pol- icy and planning. In most countries, it can be assumed, first

of all, that a great amount of basic data about the nation will already be available through consen- sus offices, bureaux of statistics, geographic and geological surveys, government departments of education, agriculture, health, etc. However, the selection from these sources and the colla- tion of data appropriate to communication plan- ning and the secondary analysis of that data in communication terms will be another important function of communication research. Data on the communication system will only have true mean- ing when related to the basic demographic and physical structures of the particular country.

The production of an inventory of the present communication resources within the country - in order to build a complete picture of the communi- cation lines in society - is the starting point to all future studies on the various factors govern- ing the processes of communication. tory provides the background for investigations into the dynamics of the system. Without such an overall map, individual pieces of research will lose their perspectives and policy decisions will be based on inadequate evaluation of past achievements, present capabilities, and future possibilities.

The communication inventory will need to be qualitative as well as quantitative. It is impor- tant that all of the following aspects should be covered by empirical data, in both statistical and descriptive terms: Institutions of production and distribution meas- ured in money, personnel, equipment, circu- lation and coverage, and divided according to the media (radio, TV, press, etc. ), form of control (public/private, etc. ), and form of in- come (licence, advertising, etc. ).

spaeeltime and divided according to broad cate- gories of content (news, entertainment, educa- tion, advertising, etc. )(l).

The consumption measured in time devoted to the media and divided according to the demographic background variables of the society.

The inven-

The production of the institutions measured in

Many of these aspects of the communication structure will already have been documented in most countries, but rarely will they have been collected together to give a full picture of the total communication resources of the comky. An example in some countries would be where press circulation statistics are readily available, but the economic structure of the media has not been fully discovered - this latter economic in- formation is most important in the process of critical analysis of communication policies, as they presently exist.

Within the collection of data and planning, the communication research programme inquiring into the economic aspects of present communica- tion policies should probably include at least these areas of concern represented by the following questions: Who are the owners of the mass media institutions - nationals, foreigners; are they individual fam- ily or group enterprises; with different media?

What is the ownership pattern - is there disper- sion or concentration; are there interlocking multi-media ownership circumstances; are the enterprises organized on an anonymous or a nominative basis ?

What is the sponsorship pattern - is it mostly commercial, mostly official, or both, and, if the latter, in which proportions; is it only through advertising or are there present other mechanisms such as subventions, preferential tax treatments, etc. ?

How is the funding of the sponsorship - national, foreign; funds?

Who, in the media, decide what will be communi- cated and how - i.e., owners, managers, practitioners ?

What are the values and the attitudes - in relation to development of media owners, managers and practitioners ?

Who takes the "in-or-out" and l'play up or play down" decisions - which rules or criteria are these decisions based upon?

How are media professionals and practitioners paid - in comparison with other professional and practitioner activities and work?

What is the method of recruitment and the nature of training (formal and informal) of media prac- titioners - how do these factors seem to affect, in whatever way, their daily communication activity work and behaviour?

are there variations

is there any predominant source of

Once information has been accumulated on such factors as ownership, sponsorship, opera- tion and the policy decisions which are made daily at different levels within the media, a next impor- tant move for research - within the collection of data for planning - would be an analysis of the con- tent of the messages produced by the institutions. Regularities in content orientation will assist in identifying the realities of communication policies. Content analysis should be able to disclose opinion and information trends in the media which can then be compared with the stated policies and with the aims of national development. - Unesco, Report of Meeting on Typologies of the Content of Radio and Television Material, Budapest, 1973, and Unesco, Meeting on Stat- istics for Radio and Television, Paris, April 1974.

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Within the critical study of the content of the media to provide a fuller indication of the re- lationship between the statement and the reality of communication policy, the following areas of content analysis would appear to be most important (1): Developmental versus non-developmental (signifi- cant versus trivial material) content - nature and proportions.

Socialization functions - what kind of norms and values do the media teach (reinforce or chal- lenge) the people and to what extent are they functional or not, for development; how do media encourage or discourage certain behaviour in the public?

Integration - do media actually contribute to so- cial cohesiveness and national unity or not?

Innovativeness - do media instil in their audience activity and innovativeness or passivity and conformity? .

Compatibility - are media providing people with messages that fit their culture and tradition or do they prefer alien orientation (values, no matter how subtly conveyed, in TV and comics, news, etc. )?

Mercantilism - are media, through advertise- ments, news, and other materials, inducing people to engage in over-necessary consump- tion behaviours, and, if so, what are the prob- able consequences of it in relation to development? Before a national communication strategy

can be defined, before a national communication plan can be developed, there is a further series of questions which will have to be answered by research, and the necessary data collected and inventories prepared. These can be summed up under the broad heading of the constraints - both internal and external to the country and region - which will influence the policy and plans, and which will affect any alternative paths proposed for the development of communication.

Some of the less complex but fundamental considerations which should be studied at the na- tional level include: The economic constraints on media development including such things as the level of investment in the communication sector which is possible within the national economic plan; trained manpower and human resources availability; import/export policies on media equipment and materials, such as paper, etc.

Infrastructural "interface" problems, such as telecommunication networks and capacities; electrification; maintenance services; national industrial capacity for the production of media equipment such as TV and radio sets, etc.

Social/political constraints such as linguistic groupings; literacy levels; religious and ethnic conflicts, etc. There are other powerful constraints which

will influence national policies and planning, from outside, so to speak. These could be broadly labelled "international constraints 'I, and although they should be realized at the national level, they demand to be studied by communication research at the international level (cf. Chapter II). Such problem areas here would be: engineering standards; investment monopoly power; copy- right and performing rights; frequency alloca- tions; wire services and international news agencies; international telecommunication traf- fic patterns; external broadcasting, etc.

The compilation of a descriptive inventory of the various aspects of mass communication should not be a single isolated exercise, but ought to be brought up to date at regular inter- vals in order to indicate trends and changes. Trends should be reported together with new data, and such trends should be registered when- ever appropriate.

The collection of data in this inventory would necessarily take place mainly at the national level, but it will certainly serve as a fruitful basis for the compilation of basic data for the research at the international level as well. In this respect, it is probable that an organized compilation of the collected national data, in order to create a comparable international stock- taking of basic facts in mass communication, would have to be carried out by international bodies, such as Unesco(2).

The economics and finance of communication services - economic evaluation of communication svstems As we know, good communication policy and planning research, to be sound, has to take ac- count of all variables that enter into a decision. No one finding is decisive. For this reasonpolicy-

(1) Content analysis by itself is too limited to detect all the factors and should be carried out in association with a verification of the audience's media and messages preferences, in addition, research which compares the value systems of the audience with those val- ues found communicated by the media would be an important parallel line of study.

(2) Unesco, International Programme of Com- munication Research, COM/MD /20, 197 1, Annex I, pages 1-3 for the presentation of an inventory of major general suggestions, "list of indicators", organized into three parts: (I) Production and distribution systems, (II) Contents of the products, (III) Consump- tion and use, each part divided into a propo- sal for quantitative basic statistics on the one hand, and for supplementary sections of new quantitative description and suggestions for complementary research on the other.

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and planning research, as we have said, is inher- ently multidisciplinary. Fundamental decisions about the nature of the communications system depend upon findings in psychology, sociology, economics, political science, organization theory, engineering and physical science, as well as upon social value judgements.

It is true that values and social philosophy play a bigger rale in communication policy and planning research than in the past. It is also and equally true that economics and engineeringltech- nical studies must also play a larger rale. Eco- nomics is the science of the allocation of scarce resources, and any planning approach or effort is an allocation of scarce resources over compet- ing goals. What is, or will be, technically pos- sible is also an essential input for good communi- cations planning approaches.

Since 1971, Unesco has systematically devel- oped guidelines and initially tested them in several selected countries for the purpose of the economic evaluation and planning of national communication systems ('1. has been, here as elsewhere, that no government can today disregard the functioning of its communi- cation system.

can be viewed as a transformation process task in which (a) data and (b) value judgements enter as inputs to achieve results (outputs) which con- sist of (c) economically measurable and (d) other societal goals:

The overriding working hypothesis

In a simplified manner, the economist's job

(a) data (c) economically y measurable

(b) value / \ (d) other societal judgements goals

The simplest task is economic evaluation based on data to achieve results in the economic sphere (a - c). In the communication policy and plan- ning context, however, the most complex trans- formatiod task: (a + b)- (c + d) prevails. The lack of a conventional body of theory to tackle this task creates a challenging opportunity.

among the various objectives that can be assigned to communications. His work is framed by a given priority listing of objectives. Yet, he can assist in the selection process by identifying the reper- cussions of a suggested course of action. Often the objectives do not stand out as signposts for future orientation, but they are internalized operational guides which derive from previous activity. For example, in the same case of com- munication services, objectives may be expressed in terms of increasing the diversity of information

The economist cannot, by himself, choose

sources; cast transmission; the user; tion among users.

communication media does not constitute a parti- cular problem if and when the total income earned is sufficient to cover total cost, including an ap- propriate return to capital. In this case, a com- munication project qualifies if its rate of return is above a cut-off level set by the planning authority.

between total cost and the income earned from sales, licence fees or advertising, because prices or fees are set at a level that deviates from the one arrived at by the use of the market mechanism. often interested in the widest possible access to media - because of their public service compon- enti however, the dominant element in most communication media is the consumption, or entertainment, component. If now the presumed public service component justifies a deviation of rates from the market or equilibrium level, and thereby a subsidy from the budget equal to the consequent income gap, the direct income of me- dia may be considered as the equivalent in value of their consumption, or entertainment, compon- ent. The economic evaluation of media becomes then essentially a comparison of the economic and social benefits of their public service ele- ment, on the one hand, with the size of the public subsidy element on the other.

The following classification is proposed: Economic effects that can lead to direct increases in national income, for example, agricultural extension services - these are in principle measurable, either by measuring the income effect or alternative costs saved.

factors of production, for example, education and health programmes - these are measur- able only if a clear-cut concept of alternative costs saved can be worked out; on the output side, the problem is identical to evaluating other health or education investments; meth- ods have been developed, but have not yet found universal recognition.

There are finally economic and social effects - the measurement of which is not only hampered by the paucity of relevant data, which is a gen- eral problem, but by the complete lack of a methodology for measuring these effects in terms that can be used in economic reasoning; and possibly improvements in public admini- stration, national integration, quality of urban

of more flexible and cost-saving broad-

or of more opportunities for participa- of a broadening of choice for

In hard economic terms, the evaluation of

In many cases, however, there is a gap

This is so because governments are

Economic effects that lead to improvement of

(1) Unesco, Economic evaluation of national communication systems, COM/WS/S 66, 1974.

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life, etc. ; these are the residual social values of communication that must be pitched against the subsidy, not of any measurable economic effect.

It should be stressed that the limits of econ- omic analysis, as outlined above, are not fixed, but can be extended, by developing new methods of determining benefits in meaningful economic terms, on the one hand, and by improving the data input from other sectors, on the other. In fact, lack of relevant data to determine the value of crucial parameters is the main impediment for a larger rale of the economist in the economic eval- uation of communication projects.

Given the present lack of comprehensive and firm knowledge in this area - combined with the difficulty of measuring the output of communica- tion - the analyst will have to adopt the very best working methods and attain the very best data and information available. Likely data sources for questions concerning environmental, social or macro-economic conditions are national statisti- cal offices, plan organizations, and the relevant ministries for the more specific information re- quired on education, literacy rates, or infrastruc- tures. Macro-economic data on national produc- tion and income, as well as income distribution, may often be obtained from reports of international agencies, such as Unesco, the World Bank, or one of the regional institutions.

the history, status and evolution of various media are the ministry of information, media administra- tions, professional and trade organizations, as well as university or private research institutions. Advertising agencies can also be an important data source, especially on information concerning media use, income distribution and spending hab- its. Where the media are privately owned and organized, problems may arise from the multi- tude of firms, One possible approach for this is to inquire whether the media are subject by law to some form of public reporting, and to follow the search up by contacting media associations, research institutes, and scanning professional journals. As a general rule, conflicting data from different sources tend to be less damaging than unchecked data from any single source which later on turn out to be false.

Of the inputs the economist needs from other sectors in order to be able to make his contribu- tion, three sorts may be singled out: In the first place - the economist needs clear ob- jectives and an indication of their hierarchy; the better the policy-maker's objectives in dif- ferent sectors are spelled out and the more they are formalized, the larger is the possible contribution of the economist (or the systems analyst ) .

Secondly - the economist needs a wide range of

The most likely sources for data concerning

data in order to assess the requirements for communication and the feasibility of alterna- tive propositions; since communication cuts across all sectors of society, the range of data required is correspondingly vast(')

Finally - particular emphasis is placed on data that express the effectiveness of different com- munication media in achieving their public ser- vice objectives in various fields under varying conditions; these coefficients of effectiveness are the crucial parameters for the translation of communication effects into economically relevant sources; the derivation of such co- efficients is an urgent task for communication research, and, until results will be forthcom- ing, the bottleneck for an adequate economic evaluation of communication projects.

Bases of decision-makina

Decisions which involve fundamental changes in the attitudes and behaviour of a large number of people, the acquisition of complex specialized skills, and investment in expensive equipment and plant often require courses of action which have little inherent flexibility. In such cases it is important that adequate time and resources be applied to analysis, and that a comprehensive array of alternatives be generated and evaluated against carefully specified goals.

process can be expressed as follows(2): Within such a framework, which includes the characteristics, the constraints, the resources and the requirements of a system, it is possible to explore problems and structures in many dif- ferent ways - functional, geographical, opera- tional, maintenance, growth, decision-making flows, etc.

There are a number of analytical techniques, which can be used to determine optimum or near optimum configurations for each of the major alternatives. At issue is usually either an output maximum for a fixed set of resources or minimum use of resources for a given output from the sys- tem. Most often, it is the latter, and the analysis takes the form of cost minimization under con- straints. Some of the constraints that must be considered in such an analysis include: the existing infrastructure - both mass media and telecommunication, so that duplication and over- lapping services and facilities may be avoided;

One way of defining the problem-solving

(1) A comprehensive list of relevant data has been drawn up in Unesco's Revised midelines

Y

for the economic evaluation of national com- munication systems, COM/WS/366.

(2) Unesco, COM/WS/369, op. cit., p.7.

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problem

I

I Analyse Determine Analyse

(2) ob~ectives(~) current operations

goals(') and environment

Determine,. .

I I strategies(4 J I I Analyse Determine Analyse inventory of constraints system resources and (internal and requirements capabilities

(5)

Conduct feasibility studies

I Determine whether (a) to go with existing

(b) to modify them (c) to design new ones

systems

(1 ) (2)

(3)

Goals as self-imposed performance/growth targets. Objectives as desired states of affairs with indications of expected time path for attainment. Current operations involve a detailed description of flows of money, materials, services, ideas, products, and information through the organization and the types of processing involved. Strategies visualize the future and work back to the present. Requirements as demands on the organization if aspirations are to be fulfilled.

(4) (5)

time preferences - for both output and expendi- ture streams resulting from the projected alter- natives, most often handled by using either bank or social discount rates which weigh the sequence of net outlays or returns in a single figure called the net present value or net worth of the suggested alternatives;

decision-makers or project sponsors, as some of the alternatives confronting them may carry higher degrees of uncertainty of eventual out- come or alternatively appear particularly attrac- tive on other than economic grounds. These calculations make use of a probability model that selects the course of action yielding the greatest expected value for output (or least ex- pected cost), taking into account the potential reluctance of those responsible to incur a large loss (o,r a dramatic deviation from the intended result), no matter how small the probability of occurrence.

risk aversion or preference - on the part of the

It is a method for building into a

project insurance against disasters, it increases awareness to the decision-maker of not achiev- ing the desired ends, and it may identify poten- tial beneficiaries and victims of deviations from the predicted path of events;

use of shadow or accounting prices - based on opportunity cost or alternative potential use and benefit calculations, by assigning a value to resources that is held more representative than market price. A businessman would use market prices to estimate the relative merit of various options. Costs and benefits from a macro-economic, national or developmental viewpoint may, however, not coincide with the growth and profitability assessment for the project in isolation. angle, labour- intensive occupations may be preferred over capital-intensive ventures or domesticallyproduced over imported materials. A second type of adjustment through opportunity costing is required when a project, because of its size and impact, changes the prevailing structure of market prices. A third type of adjustment results from the fact that some al- ternatives will affect the efficiency of other economic activities in the society in the bene- ficial or detrimental sense (externalities).

From the central policy

Additional techniques to be dealt with through economic - analys is include : demand projections for various services and outputs from the system under study, technical forecasting (the anticipated rate of technical progress and its impact on utili- zation, cost and system flexibility), capital bud- geting and cash flow management (to determine financial viability on the basis of self-imposed rates of return and liquidity requirements).

that the analyst can proceed in orderly fashion through the various phases of operation. Often, however, precise goals are absent (plurality of partially conflicting goals, ultimate clientele to be served not yet known), or it is impossible to trace out completely alternative courses of ac- tion for analytical comparison (inaccurate or missing data, imprecise or distorted measures for some types of outcome). Also, the large number of alternatives which must be analysed coupled with the difficulty of obtaining consensus on specified goals makes this type of synoptic analysis described above unduly complex, costly and time-consuming.

Nevertheless, decisions of some consequence will still have to be made even under difficult circumstances. To tackle such situations, a body of analytical techniques referred to as deci- sion analysis has been developed, mainly in busi- ness. The focus of the technique is the decision itself, and it proves most useful in situations where "action forcing events" place the decision and range of alternatives outside the control of

The comprehensive system approach assumes

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the analyst. The methodology is incremental or sequential in its application, and it sacrifices efficiency in order to gain flexibility in avoiding risk of serious loss. the "Bayesian" formulation of mathematical probability, enabling to take explicit account of the uncertainties associated with the outcome of a given course of action.

A further refinement of the technique, known as "utility theory", makes it possible for the ana- lyst to incorporate the value judgements of a decision-maker, that is, what any given outcome is worth to him, into the probabilistic decision analysis.

is likely to overtake the process of analysis in the communication policy planning field, the fol- lowing short-cut approach may prove useful: establish the comparative economic weight of the communication sector in the economy and of the media within the sector;

adjust this raw weighting by a differentiated scaling according to the social impact, the public service function, the contribution to the development goals, or the educational ser- vice provided by the media under consideration;

as the intentions /demand /supply extrapolations or forecasts; situation for each medium is required in this context;

determine the comparative contribution in terms of value added within the national economy and in terms of international exchange for each medium;

adjust this calculation by a corrective scaling according to socio-political, cultural and edu- cational criteria;

compare efficiency (output-related productivity check) and effectiveness (goal-related output check) both within the operational and broader societal framework;

list, group (that is, interrelate), phase, and cost policy measures including incentives /disincen- tives, regulations, direct action, etc., most likely to improve on performance and goal attain- ment within the prevailing political and socio- economic setting.

Its most powerful tool is

Finally, when the decision-making process

sketch the comparative growth history as well

a check on the current capacity

Planning integrated media systems

The distinction between media "relations" and "interrelations" is more than just an academic exercise, for it implies a change in philosophy and in attitude. Throughout their development, media have been related in some way - techni- cally, economically, managerially, operationally, in terms of content format and cross-reference, etc. By a relationship, little more than a connexion or association is inferred, which need not involve

any systematic or functional correlation.

ons, closer correspondence of media have been and are being planned, in order better to achieve particular results, for example, efficiency, economy, a closer matching and meeting of objec- tives. This can be said to imply an interrelation- ship, that is, a functional and systematic interde- pendence - both planned and explicit. A change in attitude towards the planning and utilization of media is taking place, and there is a definite movement towards greater self-consciousness and specifics,

Links between media can here be viewed in two ways. They may provide general constraints - to be taken into account in the formulation of com- munication policies and in communication planning - or, they may be part of a planned strategy. In both cases, media can no longer be seen in isola- tion; they must be viewed in the context of their utilization, relations and interrelations.

The manner of introduction and the nature of growth of the media in different societies have a significant bearing upon the media relationships. When there are similarities common to most societies, these normally arise from the tech- nologies which have created the media. The tech- nology of printing is common to newspapers, periodicals and books, while that of electronics is common to radio-television, sound and picture re- cording, data systems, computers and carriage by telecommunication systems and space technology.

While this is obvious, it has a bearing upon operational techniques and skills, and therefore upon technical and management relationships. In those industrial societies which first saw the growth of the media technologies, there has been a continued concentration of interests leading to strong inter-media relationships. Although this would appear to have accelerated useful technical developments, it also has been done at the ex- pense of the use to which the media have been put.

Many examples can be given to illustrate the extent of technical and management relationships: the growth of radio broadcasting networks inevit- ably resulted in close relationships with line- system operators; the development of sound-on- film recording stimulated research into micro- phone design and manufacture, helpful also to radio broadcasting, but resulting in investment by electronics manufacturers in film and broad- casting, sometimes to the point of outright owner- ship; heightened the dependence of the film industry on the banking system, and led to interlocking rela- tionships between electronics manufacturers, the film industry, radio, banking and the development of the computer: inevitably thrust the film industry into television to protect its investments; the rise of television

More recently and for a variety of good reas-

the higher cost of sound film production

the development of television

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changed the nature of radio programming - in- creasing its dependence on the recording industry - of film and movies, and of the press, all leading to more and more interlocking directorates, es- pecially of communication and of financial (in those countries where this applies) and of politi- cal interests. resulted in networks of self-interest of a few rather than networks of genuine better informa- tion and communication for all.

Even in those societies in which the histori- cal relationships have been less complex, other factors have shaped development, such as the early movement of film media specialists into television, with a subsequent misdirection and misemphasis of television, the significance of which is now realized. The fact that these rela- tionships exist may tend to restrict the best de- ployment of the new media and limit their utility.

At most levels, it is accepted that each of the media acknowledges the existence of other media in its day-to-day operations. A radio ser- vice takes account of the composition and viewing patterns of a television audience in drawing up its programmes; newspapers make reference to and draw material from radio and television pro- gramming, and vice versa.

This must, therefore, be taken into consider- ation in any planned and integrated approach.

Communication planning is also, and oftentimes more so, concerned with media interrelations which deliberately group the media to help achieve specific objectives. In this, various dimensions have to be treated - economic advantage, in- creased administrative efficiency, suitability and relevance in meeting stated development objec- tives. For example, it may be that there is an economic advantage in combining radio and tele- vision news services, to allow them to share a common pool of reporters and news sources; or, it may be that the printing of newspapers, maga- zines and periodicals can be handled more effi- ciently using shared presses. On the administra- tive front, it may be that radio and television services can reduce costs by sharing a common administration. This can apply also to postal services and telecommunication facilities.

The same analysis naturally requires a con- sideration of disadvantages and dangers inherent in media interrelations. Common ownership or management can hinder the development of gen- uine alternative information channels. of technical services can also produce similari- ties of editorial policy.

Much of the planning process for media, there- fore, comprises the weighing of pros and cons which derive from closer working relationships. This is likelyto be a more difficultexercise when issues of content, editorial policy, format and presentation are involved.

These relationships have too often

A sharing

It is now suggested that when media are used together in systematic combinations the re- sulting product should be even stronger, more convincing, more forceful. This arises because different media have different strengths and weak- nesses and depend upon appeals to different senses or groups of senses. It is to their advantage, in reaching out to audiences, to capitalize upon strengths and diminish weaknesses. Moreover, the audiences for different media are not compart- mentalized and do not exist in isolation, for ex- ample, people who watch television also listen to the radio and read newspapers and magazines, and media presentations will be stronger if they acknowledge this fact.

Systems management

One of the keys and part of the essence of plan- ning and forward-looking analyses of alternative approaches - in order to produce functional sys- tems for the new society of the future - is manage- ment. A working description of management, in relation to planning, is that management is "like driving an automobile", whereas planning is "con- cerned with its design". As management itself can be described as communication - or at least that all management problems are basically com- munication problems - we are concerned here with the management of media institutions.

management (where the main criterion is effi- ciency) and no attempt is here made to rationalize the profit element as an objective, media institu- tions can be described by the kind of business or work which they are in. Within the framework of generally accepted and understood business cate- gories, communication can be realistically seen as a "service" business - a large and unique part of the service industry. The service which communication provides (how well or how com- pletely being heavily dependent on environmental factors outside the control of management) is dualistic and perhaps can be best described by its major components, namely as a service to the individual - language, awareness of rights and obligations, cultural links, regular supply of information and entertainment, policies of government, structured information which en- hances formal and recurrent education, norms and values, a framework for viewing society (at home and abroad); to society - propagation and conservation of shared values, control on the dynamics of human interaction, a description of the society's character, building and growth of '

balancing institutions, relationship between insti- tutions, relationship between individuals and institutions, employment.

All of these are "time" services, and the form in which these services are delivered varies according to the technology employed, and can

Since management often implies business

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be relatively stable in quality. The major vari- able is content, and the management of content can focus its attention on the two aspects of pro- duction and consumption.

Both organizational research and manage- ment have in recent years paid increased atten- tion to the Organization's ability to deal with change and increased complexity id its environ- ment. To a certain extent this has always been a preoccupation of successful organizations, but it has come more and more into focus since the rate of change in economic, social, political and technological factors has increased and continues to increase. Change in the above factors has led to the start of new organizations and to more complex relations between components in the organizational environment.

The implications of this development for management is that it must face more complex decisions in most policy areas more frequently than before. As it has been said, "management will never be simple again". There is now a need for the development of new decision-making tools and procedures to assist managers to handle the new situations they are regularly facing.

Planning should be making a vast and continu- ing contribution to more effective management, but too often the necessary planning has been a "resounding and expensive failure". A survey of any representative group of companies or or- ganizations will document the conclusion that in most of them planning falls short of making an important contribution to group accomplishment.

What we know least about and what continually vexes those who are vitally concerned with the effec- tive utilization of knowledge is implementation(l). And one of the continuous threats to successful project implementation is that what had been conceptualized at one level, tends to become modi- fied by further needs assessment and additional views on project goals at other levels. Whenever funding depends on multiple sources, these centri- fugal tendencies may cause delays that have to be dealt with.

The management required to satisfy the multi- level kind of participation likely to be attracted, for example, to satellite projects (federal, re- gional, local government, social groups and their administrative representations) has to be politi- cally sensitive and yet dedicated to the respect of certain operational rules, such as: balance of total effort, short-term impact of venture, room for flexibility, to see the project through to gen- erally accepted implementation. Consequently, management has a strong interest in assuring continuing research and development as a basis for planning more elaborate project operations, including concern with the structure of rales and powers and their redefinition as the project grows.

The point at which the media institution be-

comes involved to a significant extent in research and development will be largely influenced by en- vironmental and size conditions. The technologi- cal options available both in the acquisition of the technical systems and the move to research and development will be a direct result of manage- ment's development and use of its external and internal information systems. Keeping abreast of the technology requires a long-range planning optique and relatively orthodox management prac- tice. factor are readily manageable. Furthermore, the purpose of introducing new technology in any organization is ultimately to improve organiza- tional effectiveness. routes to improved effectiveness. volve the introduction of change in a particular subsystem and process.

ment process of new communication ventures in- clude the following(2): How to realistically involve users and maintain an

open system, while at the same time assuring operational efficiency and economic use of technology?

How to foresee, and if possible monitor, the so- cial and economic consequences of project activity dictated by user expectations?

tradictory, needs as they become expressed?

social dynamics of the local scene, where the project is to make its contribution.

The need to remain aware of the limits on experi- mentation in both the social and technological areas, and of the danger for the whole if the social and technological efforts are not in harmony.

The pace of change and the predictability

There are many alternative Each will in-

The basic problems perceived in the manage-

How to orchestrate the various, and possibly con-

The need to be well aware and keep abreast of the

In cases where projects are controlled from the centre, yet designed for foremost local use, and on the broader organizational or administra- tive plane, the principal concerns are: the need to assure technical quality of service; continual collaboration of ministries and government depart- ments concerned; arrangements for the training of personnel; and co-ordination through current budgeting procedures.

centralized systems, the more efficient control of resources for given projects within the context of the broader needs of the communication sys- tem and of the society is one of the likely advan- tages of centralized operations, against the risk of inappropriate programming from ignorance of

As to the merits of centralized versus de-

(1) Unesco, On the implementation of models and systems, by Anders EdstrBm.

(2) Unesco, Report of the Meeting on Management and Planning of New Communication Systems, COM/MD/29, Paris, 28 March 1974.

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local realities and desires. On the other hand, the advantage of the decentralized or dispersed systems, even despite the presumably lower rate of technical efficiency in reaching given objec- tives, is the very possibility of ease with which multiple objectives or additional applications can develop within the system.

the discussion on management is funding. Depend- ing on the scale, sponsorship and location of various projects, funding approaches range from direct cover of all project or programme costs by a central authority to intricate multi-fund com- bined with multi-purpose systems. There is no clear-cut evidence that multiple funding leads to divergencies. One of the major policy problems here is how to justify transfers from the public budgets (that is, tax receipts), in order to stimu- late a single project beyond the level of support it could expect from the market. It is, of course, to be recognized that dire needs may not be able to express themselves via effective demand, for lack of sufficient income. The problem is thus thrown back into the political and policy sphere, beyond project management confines.

Planning of a project for the communication sector as a whole, as a user of resources and as a producer of services is a daily reality. Never- theless as to the present situation in communica- tion planning, there is no general model incorporat- ing a large number of relevant factors which can be manipulated to accommodate widely different configurations. would comprehend a number of partial approaches,! and would, if ever, grow out of and be tested by them.

The practice of planning, whatever the subJect matter and context, does however have some generalstructure. There are formal sets of inter- connected operations such as objectives and goal formulation, resource allocation, process designs, evaluation procedures and so forth. The empha- sis and explications assigned to each part of this framework vary from one undertaking to another. Much depends, among other factors, on: the magnitude of the commitments being made; the uncertainties and riskiness of the venture; and the degree to which the shared values and working relationships of those involved have been long ac- cepted or recently established.

These shifts of emphasis, changes of nuance and modifications of approach, in response to the interplay of economic, technical and social forces are the essence of translating an abstract scheme into an authentic programme. Among the more practical issues on which those concerned with operations can more easily agree than the re- searchers, are such themes as: project goal definition; project balance; need and use deter-

! mination; resource mobilization; and evaluation

One of the most frequently cited issues in

A general and working model

of efforts with a view to improvements. Experimentation is also significant, as an in-

tegrated approach in its own right. In social real- ity, and more precisely in communication-project reality, the laboratory approach is hardly applic- able. Stimulation exercises are limited, except for specific project components of a technological nature. Communication experiments are con- ducted in real time with real people. The scene changes as the experimentation proceeds, as needs are assessed and the pressure for need fulfilment increases. All the needs of experimentation give a new meaning to the term "externalities", widen it to embrace the socio-political process, repre- senting spill-over from the project that often up- sets established structures grounded in tradition.

The experimental project often turns out to be a sort of anti-plan in an environment where planning connotes an activity aiming at a well- controlled, and as far as manageable, at a surprise-free world. The internal mechanics of the experimentation do follow orderly patterns, employ planning devices, attempt to resolve con- flicts through arbitration and trade-offs, apply management strategies. There will be pro- gressive commitment as more time, effort and money are invested in the preliminary surveys, as individuals become involved, take positions and make commitments.

The key quality of an experimental project is its ability to remain flexible, to absorb and inte- grate learning from negative experience as useful information for further orientation. The continu- ous flow of corrective information becomes the spinal cord of the outreaching project. Internal and external communications tend to function well where the people involved witness that corrective information is speedily noticed, processed and translated into decisions. There are better chances for this to happen if decision patterns locate respon- sibility closer to the problem. The elements sug- gested here present some common ground for tech- nically inventive, socially progressive, and, in their management approach, integrative and ex- perimental projects for improved communications in various parts of the world.

and

Manpower planning - the need for professional mediators

As part of communication policy, there must be provision within a national communication plan for both academic and professional training of communication personnel. Training is an integ- ral part of helping to generate the necessary communication infrastructures, manpower, tech- nical skills and services, and assisting to inte- grate them into the total national development plan. Without training, no real programme can proceed.

"How best can we train people for work in the media of communication"? This question,

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which confronts decision-makers and media men in every country, is like most such questions, in that it can be answered only after we have asked a number of other questions. What kind of society are we talking about? What is the present status of the mass media? What is the educational sys- tem ofthe country? And, what kinds of things do we expect the media to accomplish for society?

It is the mediator/communicator who designs and creates the message, selects the means, arranges the communication. If he is not properly trained and educated, the programme in which he is working may well be valueless, if not counter- productive. Without a competent engineer, a broadcast message may not be properly heard or seen; without a competent producer, it may not be well enough conceived or executed to appeal to or be understood by even the primary target audience. At all levels, up-to-date professional skills are needed.'

Training implies the following. It is "a pro- cess of instruction, planned and executed within a well-conceived methodology, designed to im- part both particular and general skills, techniques and knowledge. It is intended to develop the tal- ents of an individual to his own best advantage and to the advantage of the institution which spon- sors him; as such it should promote his own satisfaction, enrich and improve the efficiency of his working base, and help realize the educa- tional and social objectives set by the wider com- munity to which he belongs''(').

Any viable communication plan should ensure that academic institutions can feed to the potential market manpower with an educational background relevant to market needs, while professional in- stitutions should be available to upgrade and up- date the skills and professional attributes employed in various fields of communication. Professional training institutions may be defined and structured either in terms of the various disciplines of com- munication, such as television, radio, press, film, individualized modern media, traditional media, etc., or as a single communication train- ing institution encompassing the whole range. The choice will depend on the total communication system in a particular country.

mass communication and the demands such devel- opment will impose on its manpower requirements, it is obvious that realistic manpower projections must relate to the goals, objectives and targets enunciated by the national development plan. In most countries, training at all levels is not yet related to any precise manpower investigation of the communication sector. Mass media recruit- ment simply lacks the infrastructures which are present in, for example, education or the civil service. A disciplined approach to the field is still required.

In the context of long-range development of

Technology transfer, external assistance and mutual Co-oDeration

New communications technology portends enor- mous advances in the potential for information processing and distribution by making information accessible in kinds and quantities not dreamed of heretofore.

The expansion of communication and informa- tion processing capacities may have consequences of enormous social benefit on the one hand, or be detrimental to different groups in a society, de- pending on the particular direction of application of the technology, the institutional structure of controls over the technology, and the particular environment in which it is introduced. This makes the dual tasks of planning the direction of applica- tion of communications technology and devising an institutional structure in which its development will be responsive to the public's interests cru- cially important.

In most fields, new technology is conceived primarily in terms of its consequences for eco- nomic efficiency in expanded production. direct economic effects of communications tech- nology, although substantial, may be one of the less significant areas of impact on society. W e have learned only belatedly that an ever-expanding gross national product may bring with it enormous social costs. In communications, the "externali- ties" - the consequences that occur outside the narrow analytical framework of the private decision-maker - are likely to dwarf the effects considered in making specific economic decisions. Hence, effective planning in communications must go beyond the aggregative and basic forecasting of direct and quantifiable economic effects. must also address the fundamental issues relat- ing to the particular structure of technological applications and evaluate the consequences for society as a total system(2).

But the purpose of economic planning here is to obtain the maximum benefit from technology in the least possible time. One way to define devel- opment is the degree to which the population under- stands the nature of technology. transferring technology to developing countries is not only a question of moving hardware - for what- ever the reason or reasons - but also of the devel- oping and receiving countries adjusting to the tech- nology and compromise. internal matter. right to decide what risks it will take in introducing

But the

It

The problem of

The compromise is an Each country has the duty and

(1) Unesco, The training perspective, by Alan Hancock, National Broadcasting Training Centre, Kuala Lumpur, 25-29 June 1973, p. 5.

William H. Melody, COM-73/CONF/605/3 b/2, Paris, October 1973.

(2) Unesco, The economics of media systems, by

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technology and incurring the social consequences. The technology of communication is at once a

typical and special case. Television has been introduced in many countries which lack the finan- cial means and skills required to use the medium either widely in the geographical sense or deeply, in the social sense. hardware systems - is generally the least of the problems associated with the introduction and de- velopment of communication media. Experience has shown that the real difficulties lie in what may be described as the social integration of technology. The technology itself has limited adaptability. Adaptation must also take place in the traditional socio-economic and political structures of the coun- try concerned. paring the existing structures for the needed change are also, basically, problems of communication.

Before undertaking any investment in tech- nology and before finalizing external assistance programmes, the donor and the recipient society need to determine what problems they are trying to solve. gear their development plans to accommodate the aid and technology they receive, while the donat- ing countries also need to spell out their purpose in aiding and need to give more attention to the best ways of solving the particular problems of the recipients.

The technology itself - the

The problems of steering and pre-

The receiving countries will have to

Planning the integration and development of communication systems, which are secured through bilateral or intermediary institutions and which can help to produce a workable plan for orderly and positive development, is essentially part of the total communication planning task. There is today a growing body of economic planners and systems analysts with wide experience in the development process. However, too many developing and re- ceiving countries are deficient in the knowledge and experience related to communication planning, and this is often the major impasse in the total picture in which technology transfer and exter- nal assistance and mutual co-operation is but a part.

donor and recipient countries and institutions, as far as external assistance is concerned, it seems that there are four main areas of need on the part of the recipient which makes external assistance essential: the lack of available human resources in determining communication needs and planning; in implementing; in staffing communication insti- tutions and facilities; and, scarce capital re- sources. It seems that, in general, receiving countries too often suffer from a combination of all four areas of need, while in some cases greater emphasis is placed on one or more of these four problem areas.

In dealing with the relationships between

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Chapter 6

Conclusion: Communication policies and Unesco's programme

The importance of a planned approach to commu- nication in society and the need for nationalcom- munication policies were central to deliberations at the sixteenth session of Unesco's General Con- ference, which authorized the Director-General to "help Member States in the formul-ationof their mass communication policies". It was at this Con- ference that Unesco's programme in this regard was first designed.

for 1973- 1974, Director-General Ren6 Maheu wrote, 'I. . . the espousal of the idea of anational communication policy . . . . . completes the pro- cess which, beginning with educational planning twelve years ago, has progressively geared the various parts of the programme to the task of systematically directing national efforts in the field of Unesco's competence in pursuit of specific objectives - in a word, in furtherance of apolicy which is itself an integral part of comprehensive planning for that development. Thus thelast area which has not yet been touched by what I have called technical assistance in regard to policy is hence- forth open for action in depth by the Organization comparable to that which is being undertaken by the other sectors, in some cases in the most inti- mate and direct association with the policy-making process, in others less so. The present Draft Programme assuredly constitutes ho more than a first step in this direction and progress will be slow and difficult. step has been taken deserves mention because it represents an innovation which may have far- reaching consequences"(1).

Only thirty years separated the emergence of mass media from Article 19 of the UniversalDec- laration of Human Rights, which unanimouslypro- claimed on 11 December 1948, "the right of free- dom of opinion and the expression of opinionas a common right for all mankind". The United Na- tions Conference on Freedom of Information held in that same year stated that this freedom was

In the introduction to Unesco's programme

But the very fact that this first

"the touchstone of all the freedoms to which the United Nations is dedicated". This Conference adopted a series of measures to help make that fundamental human right a reality.

Since 1948, the United Nations and Unesco have co-operated actively in promoting full en- joyment of information as a part of their efforts in the field of human rights. The very preamble of the constitution of Unesco states explicitly the belief of the signatory powers in the "unrestricted pursuit of objective truth and in the free exchange of ideas and knowledge", based upon which they are "agreed and determined to develop and in- crease the means of communication between their people and to employ these means for the mutual understanding, and a truer and more perfect knowledge of each other's lives".

Unesco's programme is a reflection of the world's present communication reality. Its pro- gress of thoughts, ideas and action - conditioned by technology, politics, economics, etc. - over the relatively short span of a dozen years shows Unesco's progress and development in these matters.

bute to peace and security by promoting collab- oration among the nations through education, sci- ence and culture" one of Unesco's main functions, under its Constitution, is to "maintain, increase and diffuse knowledge". Unesco has always rec- ognized-the value of the advance of human howl- edge and creativity both in themselves and as in- direct contributors to international understanding and peace.

communities of scientists, scholars and artists has been at the centre of Unesco's purposes. Much of its work has been embodied in contribu- tions to "pure" knowledge and creative activity in our time, while its efforts aimed at fostering

To realize its purpose, which is "to contri-

Helping the development of the international

(1) Unesco, 17 C/5, 1972, paragraph 31.

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the progress of ideas in education, the natural sciences, communication, the social sciences and culture have been based to a large extent on study and research carried out within the Organ- ization or directly promoted by it.

Knowledge, however, today advances at un- precedented speed, on many fronts and all over the world. Man has athis disposal meansof ac- quiring, processing, storing and transmitting knowledge whose enormous power and potentiali- ties he does not always fully control, just as he cannot always fully grasp their sheer size. These are powers easily abused, and often confined withinnarrow domestic walls. They do not always fertilize human creativity, nor is creativity brought sufficiently to bear on the potentialities of present- day knowledge. Unesco's responsibilities in the advancement of knowledge and the creative spirit are therefore as great today as they were when the Organization came into being, if not more so.

The investigation of the nature and rale of communication in contemporary society is a basic and crucial element. This area derives from the massive growth in knowledge and data, published and unpublished, in documentary form and statis- tics - an exponential growth which, when coupled with enlarged and sophisticated means for trans- mission and presentation, results in what is some- times called "information overload". It is directly concerned with the exchange and the means of making this information conveniently available to users - the "information services". The increase involume of information is a global phenomenon, although the distribution of the growthis very muchuneven, and there is a general demand for the development of information systems and "delivery" services.

The techniques being studied and applied call for an international integrated effort, whether from the point of equity, the need for rapid devel- opment in underprivileged countries, efficiency of applied research and experimentation or the basic requirement of mankind that the information so systematized be susceptible of easy distribution and exchange.

Historically, mass communication media have been implanted and developed in the different countries and regions of the world under highly varying legal and organizational provisions and to serve very different purposes; only invery rare cases has there been a concerted approach to the problem of communicationin itself. Similarly,

individual disciplines have, from individual institutional bases, improvised systems to meet their requirements in information and documen- tation without regard to the broader problem. It is only in recent years, largely due to the sudden advance in communication and information tech- nology, that the need for explicit policies and conscious planning, co-ordinated with overall development planning, has begun to be recognized.

It was this thinking which led Unesco's Gen- eral Conference, at its eighteenth session at the end of 1974, to include as one of the four "prob- lem areas'' around which Unesco's six-year, medium-term programme for 1977-1982 should be concentrated, that of "Communication between people and the exchange of information". The Conference invited the Director-General to ensure that particular importance be given in the pro- gramme to the "promotion of research . . . on the application of the right . , . to information" and to the "development of information systems and services, including policies, infrastructures, training, information transfer and exchange and tools for systems interconnexion". In addition, the Conference suggested that the programme should include "the rale of mass media as a means of social cohesion, including the influence of modern transmission techniques on contempor- ary behaviour patterns"(l).

In a related decision, the General Conference authorized the Director-General "to study ways and means by which active participation in the communication process may become possible and analyse the right to communicate . . . and to report . . . on further steps which should be taken" (2).

cate may soon be seen as a key issue in the formu- lation of national and international communication policies. It is a concept which demands careful study both from students of the communication process, planners of communication systems and policy-makers dealing with communication issues. the communication decade this new human right may become a key issue in the move towards balanced economic, social and cultural develop- ment and it may well set the form for the com- munication media of the future.

The consideration of the right to communi-

It may well be that in the latter half of

(1) Resolution 18 C/10.1 (2) Resolution 18 C/4. 121

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Librairie Manclert. B.P. 868, NIAMEY. The University Bookshop of Ife; The University Bookshop of Ibadan, P.O. Box 286, IBADAN; The University of Nsukka; The University Bookshop of Lagos; The Ahmadu BeUo University Bookshop of Zaria. All publications: Johan Grundt Tanum, Karl Johns gate 41/43. OSLO I. ‘Th Courier’ only: A/S Narvesens Litteraturjeneste, Box 6125, OSLO 6. The West-Pak Publishing Co. Ltd., Unesco Publications House, P.O. Box 374, G.P.O., LAHORE. Showoms: Urdu Bazaar, LAHORE and 57-58 Murree Highway, G/6-1, ISLAWDAD. Pakistan Publications Bookshop: Sarwar Road, RAWALPINDI; Mirza Book Agency. 65 Shabrah Quaid-e-azam, P.O. Box 729. LAHORE s. ‘a Couritr’ only: Editorial Losada Peruana, apartado 472. LIMA. Ohr publkationr: Distribuidora Inca S.A.: Emilio Althaus 470, Lince, casilla 3115, LIMA. The Modern Book Co., 926 Rizal Avenue, P.O. Box 632. MMLA. Osrodek Rozpowzechniania Wydawnictw Naukowych PAN, Palac Kultury i Nauki, WARSZAWA. Dias & Andrale Ltda., Libraria Portugal, rua o Carmo 70, LISBOA. Textbook Sales (PVT) Ltd., 67 Union Avenue, SALISBURY. I.C.E. LIBRI, Galea Victoriei nr. 126. P.O. Box 134-135 BUCIJRE?TI. Subsniplions lo prriodicals: Rompresfilatelia, Calea Victoriei nr. ng. BUCURE~TI. La Maison du Livre, 13. avenue Roume, B.P. zc-60. DAKAR; Librairie Clairafrique, B.P. 2005, DAUR. Librairie ‘Le Sénbgal’, B.P. 1594, DAKAR. Federal Publications Sdn Bhd., Times House. River Valley Road, SINGAPORE g. Van Schaik’r Bookstore (Pty.) Ltd., Libri Building, Church Street, P.O. Box 7.24. PRETORIA. All publicationr: Editiones Iberoamericanas, S.A., calle de Otïate 15. MADRID 20; Distribucibn de Publi- caciones del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Vitrubio 16, MAoRm 6; Librería del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Epigcíacas 15, BARCELONA. For ‘The Courier’ only: Ediciones Liber- apartado 17, ONDÁRROA (Viscaya). Lake House Bookshop, Sir Chittampalam Gardiner Mawata, P.O. Box 244, COLOMBO 2. AI Bashir Bookshop, P.O. Box I I 18, KHARTOUM. All publisalionr: A/B C.E. Fritzes Kungl. Hovbokhandel. Fredsgatan 2, Box 16356, 103 27 STOCKHOLM 16. For ‘The Courier’: Svenska FN-Förbundet. Skolgränd 2, Box 150 50, S-104 65 STOCKHOLM. Europa Verlag, Rämistrasse 5, Z~RICH; Librairie Payot, 6. rue Grenus, 1211 GENBVE II. Dar es Salaam Bookshop, P.O. Box 9030. DAR ES SALAAM. Suksapan Panit, Mansion 9, Rajdamnern Avenue, BANGKOK. Librairie évangklique. P.B. 378; LoMÉ; Librairie du Bon Pasteur, B.P. 1164, LoMÉ; Librairie moderne, B.P. 777, LoMÉ. Librairie Hachette, 469 Istiklal Caddesi, Beyoglu, ISTANBUL. Uganda Bookshop, P.O. Box 145. KAYPAU. Mezhdunarodnaja Kniga, MOSKVA. G-200. H.M. Stationery Office, P.O. Box 569, LONDON SEI g N H ; Government bookshops: London, Belfast, Bir- mingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Manchester. Unipub, a Xerox Education Company, Box 433, Murray Hill Station, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10016. Librairie Attie, B.P. 64, Ouagadougou, Librairie catholique (Jeunesse d’Afrique’, OUAGADOUGOU. Librería del Este, avenida Francisco de Miranda 52, EdiC Galipan, apartado 60337. CARAC~. Jugoslovenska Knjiga, Terazije 27. BEOGFUW. Drzavna Zalozba Slovenije Mestni Trg. 26, LJUBLJANA. La Librairie, Institut national d’ktudes politiques, B.P. 2307, KINSHASA; Commission nationale de la Répu- blique du Zaire pour l’Unesco. Miaistbre de 1’6ducation nationale. KINSHASA.

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