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Remaking Public Service Broadcasting: Lessons from Allston-Brighton Free Radio

Journal Article

Kevin Howley
Social Movement Studies
3: ( 1 October 2004 ) : 221-240

Topic(s) of work
Public service requirements, Radio, Community radio, Democratization, Theory

Abstract

The role of communication in social movement theory is well observed. Considerably less attention has been given to the question of whether or not media reform efforts constitute social movements in and of themselves. In an effort to consider the efficacy of media reform initiatives and to evaluate their relevance to social movement studies, this essay examines the evolution of a so-called 'free radio' station in the city of Boston, Massachusetts, USA. The essay situates a discussion of 'free radio' in relation to the unprecedented consolidation of commercial radio and the attendant diminution of public service broadcasting in the USA. The lessons learned from Allston-Brighton Free Radio help to illuminate the local and particular dynamics of a global movement for communicative democracy.


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Activism, Advocacy, and Social Movement Resources