Page 266 - Critical Political Economy of the Media
P. 266

Index  245

             Turow, Joseph 6, 13, 150          value 5, 127–28
             Twitter 126, 202                  Van Cuilenburg, Jan V. 105, 106
                                               Van der Wurff, Richard 106,
             uncertainty 91–92, 109–10           122–23
             UNESCO 160–61, 183                Verizon 86
             United Kingdom 30–31, 33, 55;     vertical integration 90, 92
               advertising 145; broadcasters 106;  Viacom 82, 85, 88, 95, 100, 115, 138
               Channel Four 204; citizenship 104;  Vietnam War 51
               crisis in journalism 129, 130; export of  Vivendi 82, 85, 86, 87, 92, 96–97
               TV formats 174; global media    Voices 21 coalition 191
               companies 86, 87; Internet 113, 121,
               126–27; marketisation 188–89;   Waetjen, Jarrod 21
               ownership policy 180; press bias 101;  Waisbord, Silvio 171
               press concentration 88; radical  Walras, Leon 5
               functionalism 46–48             Warner Bros 94
             United Nations (UN) 160, 182      Warner Music 97
             United States 41, 65, 68, 161, 170, 183;  Wasko, Janet 30, 33–34, 58
               advertising 121, 145, 147–48, 155;  Web 2.0 132, 134n2, 202
               citizenship 104; corporate influence  welfarism 60, 66
               192; crisis in journalism 54, 129, 130;  Wernick, Andrew 152
               cultural imperialism 159, 162–63,  When The Levees Broke 204
               165–67; export of audiovisual content  Wikipedia 111
               164, 174; film industry 179; financial  Williams, Anthony D. 131
               crisis 83; financialisation 84; ‘firewall’  Williams, Raymond 16, 17, 18, 24, 25,
               concept 147; global media companies  28, 31–32, 36n2, 36n3
               86, 88; healthcare policy debate 54;  Winfield, Betty H. 67
               hypercommercialism 105; international  Winseck, Dwayne 34, 168
               corporate expansion 85; Internet 113,  women 140, 200, 208
               114–15, 118, 121, 126, 127, 151;  working class 17, 49, 50, 141, 169
               media concentration 98, 99; mergers  World Trade Organisation (WTO) 166,
               and acquisitions 82; newspapers   167, 182–83
               89–90; propaganda model 43, 44, 45;  WPP Group 137, 138
               radical media 205; television 140,
               172–73; US research tradition 26,  Yahoo 118, 125–26, 130–31
               29–30, 33–35                    Young, Sherman 201
             Universal 82, 94                  YouTube 82, 111, 128, 202
             Univision 87                      Yugoslavia, former 196
             user-generated content (UGC) 72, 131,
               133, 143, 202                   Zappala, Tom 94–95
             ‘uses and gratifications’ approach 21, 40  Zhao, Yuezhí 16, 59
   261   262   263   264   265   266