Abstract
This introductory chapter discusses both media policy and the field of media policy research. Focusing on the subject of research first, we deal with media policy, media regulation and media governance, and how they relate to each other. We argue that media policies emanate from and are reflective of more abstract paradigmatic views on the relationship between the state, society and media. Moreover, media policy is not only about the output of policy-making but also about the policy-making process (politics) that takes place within specific institutional structures (polity). In turn, media regulation refers to the specific instruments implemented to achieve specified policy goals and media governance reflects a power shift from governments to new actors and fora. Proceeding to the research field, we follow Lasswell by defining media policy research as encompassing both doing research about media policy and informing media policy-making. We briefly discuss the history of this field of study and the ongoing debate about the relationship between administrative and critical research. The chapter ends by looking at the promise and limitations of the recent trend of evidence-based policy-making and its implication for the analysis of media and communication policy.
Media policy analysis sets out to ‘examine the ways in which policies in the field of communication are generated and implemented, as well as their repercussions or implications for the field of communication as a whole’.
(Hansen, Cottle, Negrine, & Newbold, 1998, p. 67)
Despite Bock, Velleman, and De Veaux’s (2015, p. 1) warning not to call the first chapter “Introduction” because ‘nobody reads the introduction’ (which they felt safe admitting in a footnote ‘because nobody reads footnotes either’), we dared to do so because we believe in our readers. And, apparently, we were right: you even read the notes!
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Further Reading
Braman S. (Ed.). (2003). Communication researchers and policy making. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Freedman, D. (2008). The politics of media policy. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Fischer, F. (2003). Reframing policy analysis: Discursive politics and deliberative practices. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Just, N., & Puppis, M. (Eds.). (2012). Trends in communication policy research: New theories, methods and subjects. Bristol; Chicago: Intellect.
Napoli, P. M., & Gillis, N. (2006). Reassessing the potential contribution of communications research to communications policy: The case of media ownership. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 50(4), 671–691.
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Puppis, M., Van den Bulck, H. (2019). Introduction: Media Policy and Media Policy Research. In: Van den Bulck, H., Puppis, M., Donders, K., Van Audenhove, L. (eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Methods for Media Policy Research. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-16065-4_1
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