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Inequality : the blind spot of Western communication studies
ID Mance, Boris (Avtor), ID Slaček Brlek, Aleksander Sašo (Avtor)

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Izvleček
Our study focuses on the prevalence of conceptualizations of communicative inequality in the field of communication studies after the end of World War II. While communication studies has adopted and been influenced by conceptualizations of inequality from related disciplines and fields, conceptualizations of communicative inequality seem to have played only a marginal role. By means of a network analysis conducted on a corpus of more than fifteen thousand articles published in eight prominent international journals in the field between 1945 and 2018, this study aims to map the prominence and adoption of different conceptualizations of communication inequality. With the tools of network analysis, the study identifies particular conceptualizations by tracing the most co-occuring cited authors associated with a particular conceptualization across time. We identify four distinct clusters of conceptualizations: modernization theory, cultural imperialism, knowledge gap, and digital divide. Historically, approaches to communication inequality have been divided either along ideological lines—largely defined by support for (modernization theory) or opposition to (cultural imperialism) US foreign policy—or in terms of different levels of communication inequality. While both modernization and cultural imperialism focus on international communication inequality, the knowledge gap tradition focuses on interpersonal differences. We argue that the dominant approaches and paradigmatic shifts in conceptualizations of communication inequality have largely been driven by forces outside of communication studies. Modernization, which dominated the period until the late 1970s, grew from US interests in securing hegemony in the third world. Critiques of cultural imperialism emerged during the 1970s as a direct challenge to modernization theory, connected strongly to third-world opposition to US hegemony. The notion of a digital divide, which has become the predominant conceptualization of communication inequality since 2000, stems largely from the concerns of the US Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration for providing “universal service” to US citizens, while the knowledge gap tradition relates to the effectiveness of top-down communication campaigns.

Jezik:Angleški jezik
Ključne besede:communication studies, communicative inequality, conceptualizations of inequality, articles, network analysis
Vrsta gradiva:Članek v reviji
Tipologija:1.01 - Izvirni znanstveni članek
Organizacija:FDV - Fakulteta za družbene vede
Status publikacije:Objavljeno
Različica publikacije:Objavljena publikacija
Datum objave:03.07.2022
Leto izida:2022
Št. strani:Str. 1-45
Številčenje:Vol. 2.
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-137873 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
UDK:303:316.77
ISSN pri članku:2637-6091
DOI:10.32376/d895a0ea.dd047f5b Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
COBISS.SI-ID:113797891 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu
Datum objave v RUL:05.07.2022
Število ogledov:575
Število prenosov:97
Metapodatki:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
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Gradivo je del revije

Naslov:History of media studies
Založnik:Mediastudies.press
ISSN:2637-6091
COBISS.SI-ID:113792515 Povezava se odpre v novem oknu

Licence

Licenca:CC BY-NC 4.0, Creative Commons Priznanje avtorstva-Nekomercialno 4.0 Mednarodna
Povezava:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/deed.sl
Opis:Licenca Creative Commons, ki prepoveduje komercialno uporabo, vendar uporabniki ne rabijo upravljati materialnih avtorskih pravic na izpeljanih delih z enako licenco.
Začetek licenciranja:05.07.2022

Projekti

Financer:ARRS - Agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije
Številka projekta:J5-1793-2019
Naslov:The role of communication inequalities in disintegration of a multinational society

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