"Le Ministère Cambodgien de l'Information comprend le cabinet et la direction des bureaux, elle-même subdivisée en services de l'information, de la propagande, du cinéma, de la radio et de l'agence khmère de presse — L'agence khmère de presse, créée en 1950 emploie 56 agents et jouit d'une
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autonomie financière — Elle est alimentée en nouvelles internationales par les agences AFP, Reuter, Tass et Chine Nouvelle — Elle exploite, en outre, les renseignements fournis par les ambassades à l'étranger, la lecture des journaux et l'écoute des radios étrangères — La presse écrite est représentée au Cambodge par dix quotidiens totalisant 42.000 exemplaires environ — La Constitution garantit la liberté de la presse — Une commission de contrôle « a posteriori » a toutefois été constituée — Le cinéma a une réglementation beaucoup plus étroite que celle de la presse." (Jean-Marie Van Bol, Abdelfattah Fakhfakh: The use of mass media in the developing countries. Brussels: CIDESA, 1971 Nr. 1033, topic code 072.1, 131)
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"Situation et problèmes de la presse dans l'ancienne Indochine et spécialement au Vietnam — Relations entre la presse et le gouvernement — Précensures." (Jean-Marie Van Bol, Abdelfattah Fakhfakh: The use of mass media in the developing countries. Brussels: CIDESA, 1971 Nr. 428, topic code 110
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.1, 110.32)
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"In the present work, the various aspects of news supply are studied from different angles. Chapter I outlines the history of agencies and of the agreements between the world agencies. It also includes a chronological list of agencies of all countries, which shows the extent to which national agenci
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es have sprung up since 1920. The legal system governing agency operation and the problem of the ownership of news are studied in Chapter II. Chapter III contains reports, as accurate as possible, on the various telegraphic agencies which gather and distribute news in all parts of the world. Chapters IV and V study the relationship between telecommunications and telegraphic news agencies. The development of telecommunications at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century decisively influenced the growth of news agencies; it is therefore necessary to trace the history of telecommunications, to mention the various international agreements governing them, and to refer to their international organization, in so far as these matters affected the news agencies. Chapter VI is devoted to an examination of the use made of news by broadcasting stations and their relations with news agencies. Lastly, Chapter VII studies the most important question of all-how the general public in each country gets its news." (Introduction, page 10)
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