nocred
2 min. read
Journalism in the United States is in crisis: Local newspapers are shuttering at an alarming rate, large cities that were once served by multiple daily local newspapers now barely sustain one or two major outlets, and the government has made concentrated attacks against public media.
A new report from the Roosevelt Institute, co-authored by Victor Pickard, C. Edwin Baker Professor of Media Policy and Political Economy at the Annenberg School for Communication, traces the roots of these crises and offers an evidence-based roadmap to rebuild public media.
“As we show in the report, our media institutions have become dangerously vulnerable to commercial pressure and political capture,” says Pickard, who co-wrote the report. “The next chapter of democracy reform must treat our media system as a core infrastructure that makes democracy possible and requires protection from both state control and commercial capture.”
Some of the key findings show that the crisis facing American journalism is the predictable outcome of decades of corporate libertarian media policy that prioritized commercial logics over democracy. Four entrenched constraints—the erosion of the public interest, deregulation and self-regulation, chronic underinvestment in public media, and a diminished Press Clause—have structured the often invisible domain of U.S. media policy.
Read more at Annenberg School for Communication.
From Annenberg School for Communication
nocred
nocred
Despite the commonality of water and ice, says Penn physicist Robert Carpick, their physical properties are remarkably unique.
(Image: mustafahacalaki via Getty Images)
Organizations like Penn’s Netter Center for Community Partnerships foster collaborations between Penn and public schools in the West Philadelphia community.
nocred