Pages

Monday, 5 December 2011

The Leveson Inquiry

The Prime Minister announced a two-part inquiry investigating the role of the press and police in the phone-hacking scandal, on 13 July 2011.
Lord Justice Leveson was appointed as Chairman of the Inquiry.  The first part will examine the culture, practices and ethics of the media. In particular, Lord Justice Leveson will examine the relationship of the press with the public, police and politicians.  He is assisted by a panel of six independent assessors with expertise in key issues being considered by the Inquiry.
The Inquiry has been established under the Inquiries Act 2005 and has the power to summon witnesses.  It is expected that a range of witnesses, including newspaper reporters, management, proprietors, policemen and politicians of all parties will give evidence under oath and in public.
It will make recommendations on the future of press regulation and governance consistent with maintaining freedom of the press and ensuring the highest ethical and professional standards.
Lord Justice Leveson opened the hearings on Monday 14 November 2011, saying: “The press provides an essential check on all aspects of public life. That is why any failure within the media affects all of us. At the heart of this Inquiry, therefore, may be one simple question: who guards the guardians?”


Witnesses so far:

Alastair Campbell
Charlotte Church
Steve Coogan
Nick Davies
Anne Diamond
Bob Dowler
Sally Dowler
Mary-Ellen Field
Garry Flitcroft
Sheryl Gascoigne
Hugh Grant
HJK
Ian Hurst
Chris Jefferies
Mark Lewis
Gerry McCann
Kate McCann
Sienna Miller
Max Mosley
Alex Owens
Richard Peppiatt
Tom Rowland
JK Rowling
Graham Shear
Joan Smith
Mark Thomson
Margaret Watson
Jane Winter
Francis Aldhouse
Peter Burden

BBFC


The BBFC is an independent, self-financing and not-for-profit media content regulator. We operate transparent, consistent and trusted co-regulatory and self-regulatory classification and labelling systems in the UK.
As a highly expert and experienced regulator, our mission is to:
  • protect  the public, and especially children, from content which might raise harm risks
  • empower the public, especially parents, to make informed viewing choices
  • recognise and respect adult freedom of choice within the law
  • respond to and reflect changing social attitudes towards media content through proactive public consultation and research
  • provide a cost-effective, efficient classification service within our statutory remit
  • work in partnership with the industry to develop innovative service models to provide content advice which support emerging media delivery systems
  • provide an effective service to enforcement agencies
bbfc.co.uk

Ofcom

Ofcom is the communications regulator.
We regulate the TV and radio sectors, fixed line telecoms and mobiles, plus the airwaves over which wireless devices operate.
We make sure that people in the UK get the best from their communications services and are protected from scams and sharp practices, while ensuring that competition can thrive.
Ofcom operates under the Communications Act 2003. This detailed Act of Parliament spells out exactly what Ofcom should do – we can do no more or no less than is spelt out in the Act.
The Act says that Ofcom’s general duties should be to further the interests of citizens and of consumers. Meeting these two duties is at the heart of everything we do.
Accountable to Parliament, we are involved in advising and setting some of the more technical aspects of regulation, implementing and enforcing the law.
Ofcom is funded by fees from industry for regulating broadcasting and communications networks, and grant-in-aid from the Government.

What we do
Our main legal duties are to ensure:
  • the UK has a wide range of electronic communications services, including high-speed services such as broadband;
  • a wide range of high-quality television and radio programmes are provided, appealing to a range of tastes and interests;
  • television and radio services are provided by a range of different organisations;
  • people who watch television and listen to the radio are protected from harmful or offensive material;
  • people are protected from being treated unfairly in television and radio programmes, and from having their privacy invaded; and
  • the radio spectrum (the airwaves used by everyone from taxi firms and boat owners, to mobile-phone companies and broadcasters) is used in the most effective way.
What we do not do
We are not responsible for regulating:
  • disputes between you and your telecoms provider;
  • premium-rate services, including mobile-phone text services and ringtones;
  • the content of television and radio adverts;
  • complaints about accuracy in BBC programmes;
  • the BBC TV licence fee; or
  • newspapers and magazines.
ofcom.org.uk

Key Media Theories

Audience

Audience theory provides a starting point for many Media Studies tasks. Whether you are constructing a text or analysing one, you will need to consider the destination of that text (i.e. its target audience) and how that audience (or any other) will respond to that text.
Remember that a media text in itself has no meaning until it is read or decoded by an audience.
For GCSE, you learned how audience is described and measured. Now you need a working knowledge of the theories which attempt to explain how an audience receives, reads and responds to a text. Over the course of the past century or so, media analysts have developed several effects models, ie theoretical explanations of how humans ingest the information transmitted by media texts and how this might influence (or not) their behaviour. Effects theory is still a very hotly debated area of Media and Psychology research, as no one is able to come up with indisputable evidence that audiences will always react to media texts one way or another. The scientific debate is clouded by the politics of the situation: some audience theories are seen as a call for more censorship, others for less control. Whatever your personal stance on the subject, you must understand the following theories and how they may be used to deconstruct the relationship between audience and text.

1. The Hypodermic Needle Model

Dating from the 1920s, this theory was the first attempt to explain how mass audiences might react to mass media. It is a crude model (see picture!) and suggests that audiences passively receive the information transmitted via a media text, without any attempt on their part to process or challenge the data. Don't forget that this theory was developed in an age when the mass media were still fairly new - radio and cinema were less than two decades old. Governments had just discovered the power of advertising to communicate a message, and produced propaganda to try and sway populaces to their way of thinking. This was particularly rampant in Europe during the First World War (look at some posters here) and its aftermath.
Basically, the Hypodermic Needle Model suggests that the information from a text passes into the mass consciouness of the audience unmediated, ie the experience, intelligence and opinion of an individual are not relevant to the reception of the text. This theory suggests that, as an audience, we are manipulated by the creators of media texts, and that our behaviour and thinking might be easily changed by media-makers. It assumes that the audience are passive and heterogenous. This theory is still quoted during moral panics by parents, politicians and pressure groups, and is used to explain why certain groups in society should not be exposed to certain media texts (comics in the 1950s, rap music in the 2000s), for fear that they will watch or read sexual or violent behaviour and will then act them out themselves.

2. Two-Step Flow

The Hypodermic model quickly proved too clumsy for media researchers seeking to more precisely explain the relationship between audience and text. As the mass media became an essential part of life in societies around the world and did NOT reduce populations to a mass of unthinking drones, a more sophisticated explanation was sought.
Paul Lazarsfeld, Bernard Berelson, and Hazel Gaudet analysed the voters' decision-making processes during a 1940 presidential election campaign and published their results in a paper called The People's Choice. Their findings suggested that the information does not flow directly from the text into the minds of its audience unmediated but is filtered through "opinion leaders" who then communicate it to their less active associates, over whom they have influence. The audience then mediate the information received directly from the media with the ideas and thoughts expressed by the opinion leaders, thus being influenced not by a direct process, but by a two step flow. This diminished the power of the media in the eyes of researchers, and caused them to conclude that social factors were also important in the way in which audiences interpreted texts. This is sometimes referred to as the limited effects paradigm.

3. Uses & Gratifications

During the 1960s, as the first generation to grow up with television became grown ups, it became increasingly apparent to media theorists that audiences made choices about what they did when consuming texts. Far from being a passive mass, audiences were made up of individuals who actively consumed texts for different reasons and in different ways. In 1948 Lasswell suggested that media texts had the following functions for individuals and society:
  • surveillance
  • correlation
  • entertainment
  • cultural transmission
Researchers Blulmer and Katz expanded this theory and published their own in 1974, stating that individuals might choose and use a text for the following purposes (ie uses and gratifications):
  • Diversion - escape from everyday problems and routine.
  • Personal Relationships - using the media for emotional and other interaction, eg) substituting soap operas for family life
  • Personal Identity - finding yourself reflected in texts, learning behaviour and values from texts
  • Surveillance - Information which could be useful for living eg) weather reports, financial news, holiday bargains
Since then, the list of Uses and Gratifications has been extended, particularly as new media forms have come along (eg video games, the internet)


4. Reception Theory

Extending the concept of an active audience still further, in the 1980s and 1990s a lot of work was done on the way individuals received and interpreted a text, and how their individual circumstances (gender, class, age, ethnicity) affected their reading.
This work was based on Stuart Hall's encoding/decoding model of the relationship between text and audience - the text is encoded by the producer, and decoded by the reader, and there may be major differences between two different readings of the same code. However, by using recognised codes and conventions, and by drawing upon audience expectations relating to aspects such as genre and use of stars, the producers can position the audience and thus create a certain amount of agreement on what the code means. This is known as a preferred reading.
mediaknowitall.com

Pros and Cons of media regulation

Pros of Censorship
  • Censorship of pornographic material prevents the corrupting of the children.
  • Religious conflicts are avoided by the censorship of material deemed insulting or offensive to a particular religious community.
  • Censorship is necessary to preserve the secrets of a nation.
  • Censorship is useful in hiding sensitive military information, which could be used by an enemy state.
  • Scenes of people consuming alcohol or smoking influence people to copy them. Hence censoring such scenes serves a useful purpose.
  • People may copy dangerous stunts shown on TV or movies. Censorship proves necessary here.
  • Books may be used to portray wrong information about individuals or groups that could incite violence against them. Censorship would definitely prove helpful here.
  • It can be used to prevent politically motivated propaganda.
  • It protects the privacy of people.
  • Plagiarism is prevented.
  • Abusive scenes in movies may offend some people. Censorship prevents that.
  • It protects indigenous cultures from the bad influence of foreign cultures.
  • It prevents the public display of disrespect to any particular individual or community.
  • It prevents companies from spreading inaccurate or grossly exaggerated claims about their products.
  • It promotes political correctness.
  • Terrorists are prevented from learning about dangerous technology like the atom bomb.
  • Children are prevented from learning things that could harm them and others.
  • It prevents the ill effects of globalization affecting societies.
  • It shields the morals of society.
  • It restrains vulgarity and obscenity.
  • The surfeit of violence in movies and TV is restricted by it.
  • It prevents violence by stopping the broadcast of events, which might trigger it.
Cons of Censorship
  • If sex-related topics are completely censored it becomes difficult to teach children and teenagers about the dangers of HIV/AIDS.
  • Dictators and dictatorship use it to promote a flattering image of themselves and for removing any information that is negative to them.
  • Freedom of speech is compromised.
  • Religious fundamentalists like the Taliban use them to coerce the population.
  • It encroaches upon the freedom of the press.
  • It prevents the free flow of ideas.
  • It may intrude on the privacy of a person.
  • Withholding of information only leads to ignorance in the society.
  • Censoring of information may lead to a wrong image perceived by the public.
  • It is generally associated with dictatorship.
  • Censorship in books, plays and movies may compromise their entertainment value.
  • Censorship has been misused in the past.
  • It is a force against globalization.
  • It works against creativity.
  • If you hide something from people they will become extra curious about it.
  • It has no place in a truly democratic society.
  • It gives rise to and hides human rights abuses.
  • It is used to control people.
  • There can be different standards of morals among different societies quite different from the imposed ones by the censorship.
  • It may be used to block legitimate criticism.
  • Governments should not control people. It should be the other way round.
  • Individuals have different tastes.
  • It stifles the opposition, broadcasting only a particular point of view.
  • People have a right to know.
buzzle.com