04205nam 22006013u 450 991079228650332120230721015250.0(CKB)2560000000152098(EBL)1159817(OCoLC)833764409(SSID)ssj0000787485(PQKBManifestationID)12348092(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000787485(PQKBWorkID)10815736(PQKB)10052679(MiAaPQ)EBC1159817(EXLCZ)99256000000015209820140421d2009|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrUnderstanding Community Media[electronic resource] SAGE PublicationsThousand Oaks SAGE Publications20091 online resource (425 p.)Description based upon print version of record.Cover; Contents; Preface; Introduction; PART I: Theoretical Issues and Perspectives; 1 - Social Solidarity and Constituency Relationships in Community Radio; 2 - Democratic Potentials of Citizens' Media Practices; 3 - Community Arts and Music, Community Media; 4 - Collaborative Pipelines; 5 - Notes on a Theory of Community Radio; 06-Howley-Part II-46019; PART II: Civil Society and the Public Sphere; 6 - Reimagining National Belonging With Community Radio; 7 - Alternative Media and the Public Sphere in Zimbabwe; 8 - Toronto Street News as a Counterpublic Sphere9 - Evaluating Community Informatics as a Means for Local Democratic Renewal10 - Mapping Communication Patterns Between Romani Media and Romani NGOs in the Republic of Macedonia; PART III: Cultural Geographies; 11 - Aboriginal Internet Art and the Imagination of Community; 12-Howley-46019; 12 - Media Interventions in Racialized Communities; 13 - Community Collaboration in Media and Arts Activism; 14 - Examining the Successesand Struggles of New Zealand's Maori TV; 15 - Itche Kadoozy, Orthodox Representation, and the Internet as Community Media; PART IV: Community Development16 - Positioning Education Within Community Media17 - Dalitbahujan Women's Autonomous Video; 18 - Coketown and Its Alternative Futures; 19-Howley-46019; 19 - Addressing Stigma and Discrimination Through Participatory Media Planning; PART V: Community Media and Social Movements; 20 - Indigenous Community Radio and the Struggle for Social Justice in Colombia; 21 - Ethnic Community Media and Social Change; 22 - A Participatory Model of Video Making; 23 - Feminist Guerrilla Video in the Twin Cities; PART VI: Communication Politics24 - Community Radio and Video, Social Activism,and Neoliberal Public Policy in Chile During the Transition to Democracy25 - Past, Present, and Future of the Hungarian Community Radio Movement; 26 - Community Media Activists in Transnational Policy Arenas; 27 - Closings and Openings; 28 - The Rise of the Intranet Era; PART VII: Local Media, Global Struggles; 29 - "Asking We Walk"; 30 - Radio Voices Without Frontiers Global Antidiscrimination Broadcast; 31 - Media Activism for Global Justice; 32 - The Global Turn of the Alternative Media Movement; Index; About the EditorAbout the ContributorsA cutting edge examination of community media from theoretical, empirical, historical, and practitioner perspectives, with essays on subjects like women's video collectives in India, indigenous radio in Colombia, street newspapers in Canada, and independent media in Nigeria.Local mass mediaLocal mass mediaLocal mass mediaJournalism & CommunicationsHILCCCommunication & Mass MediaHILCCLocal mass media.Local mass media.Local mass mediaJournalism & CommunicationsCommunication & Mass Media302.23Howley Kevin1575107Howley KevinAU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910792286503321Understanding Community Media3851812UNINA