Document details

Negotiating Communication Rights: Case Studies from India

New Delhi; Thousand Oaks: Sage (2011), xxi, 252 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 226-245, index

Signature commbox: 317:10-Rights 2011

"This book, through five case studies in India, explores communication rights movements here. It encompasses pivotal areas of movements, such as, Right to Information, Free and Open Source Software, Women and Media, and Community Radio and Citizen Journalism. The complexity of specific agendas in India, such as, rights of women, citizen activism and role of media is analyzed while placing the subject in a broader theoretical context. The author makes a strong case of the right of people to be able to access information. He also explores processes through which ordinary citizens are able to develop spaces for self-expression; a concept synonymous with media democratization in this century. The author highlights the need to ‘localize’ communication rights struggles in those places facing real communication deficits daily." (Publisher description)
I. THEORY
A Brief History of Communication Rights
A Philosophy of Communication Rights
Observations on the Theorising of Communication Rights in India
The Communication Rights of Refugees and Displaced People
II. CASE STUDIES IN INDIA
The Right to Information Movement
The Community Radio Movement
The Women and Media Movement
The Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) Movement
The Citizen Journalism Movement
Postscript: On the Operationalisation of Communication Rights in India Today