Document details

Other Voices: The Struggle for Community Radio in India

New Dehli et al.: Sage (2007), 319 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 300-313, index

ISBN 978-0-7619-3602-2 (hbk); 978-81-7829-765-1 (hbk India)

Signature commbox: 317:30-Community 2007

"This book not only offers a historical account of the struggle for community radio in India, but also provides a documentation of the efforts of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and rural communities to realise the Brechtian mandate to use radio as a tool to build a robust civil society in the country, employing creative ways, in the absence of a licence to broadcast, to take their community audio programmes to the people. Work on this project started in 2000 around the time when Vinod Pavarala participated in the drafting of the now oft-quoted Pastapur Initiative on Community Radio Broadcasting along with representatives of NGOs, media activists, communication educators, journalists, and policymakers. The document articulated the need for using communication technologies for the empowerment of local communities and argued that people must have access to media not solely as receivers and consumers but as producers and contributors of media content. Taking into consideration the experiences and policy precedents from other democratic countries, the document appealed for broadcasting in India to be based on principles of ‘universal access, diversity, equitable resource allocation, democratisation of airwaves, and empowerment of historically disadvantaged sections of society.’ Since then, the inspiration we drew from this pronouncement took us to a number of villages in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Gujarat and Jharkhand where exciting community radio projects, often referred to as the ‘Big Four’, have been attracting national and international attention. The palpable enthusiasm about the potential of community radio in India that we exude is an outcome of our interaction with the people who are part of these community radio initiatives." (Preface, page 12)
1 Introduction: Politics of Community Radio in India, 15
2 Legislating for Community Radio: A Comparative Analysis of Policy Frameworks in Other Countries, 43
3 Mixed Signals: Radio Broadcasting Policy in India, 81
4 Facilitating Community Radio in India: Profiles of NGOs and their Community Radio Initiatives, 109
5 Narrowcasting Development: Community Radio and Participatory Communication, 145
6 Revitalising Civil Society: Forging Counterpublics with Community Radio, 183
7 Community Radio for Empowerment: The Gender Dimension, 210
8 Conclusion: Community Radio in India—Opportunities and Challenges, 241
Appendix-I: Supreme Court Judgment on Airwaves (1995), 263
Appendix-II: Bangalore Declaration on Radio (1996), 270
Appendix-III: The Pastapur Initiative on Community Radio Broadcasting (2000), 280
Appendix-IV: Executive Summary of Recommendations for a Policy on Community Radio Broadcasting in India, 284
Appendix-V: Policy Guidelines for setting up Community Radio Stations in India, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Government of India, December (2006), 290