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Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
LESSON
06
HUTCHINS
COMMISSION ON FREEDOM, CHICAGO
SCHOOL & BASIC
PRINCIPLES
OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
THEORY
So
during the 1920s and 1930s a
new normative theory of mass
communication began to emerge
that
rejected
both radical libertarian and
ideas of technocratic control. As
pressure for government
regulation
of
media mounted, industry leaders
responded with efforts to
professionalize. Rather than cede
control
of
media to a government agency, media
managers went on record with pledges to
serve public needs.
Industry
codes of ethics began to
formalize another important conception
about the role of media-that
of
a
watchdog guarding the welfare of the
public. It assumed that media
should continually scan the
social
world
and alert the public to problems.
Investigations
of corruption proved so popular
that the media was envisioned as an
independent social
institution,
a FOURTH ESTATE of government,
business, religion, education
and family-serve the
public.
This perspective assumed that
once people are informed
about wrong-doing, incompetence,
or
inefficiencies,
they will take action
against it , the masthead of an a paper said
that
"Give
light and the People will
find their way."
Despite
moves toward professionalization
and self-regulation, pressure
for greater government
regulation
of media mounted throughout World
War II and continued during the
anti-communist
agitation
that followed.
So
Henry Luce, CEO of Time
Inc., provided funding for
an independent commission to make
recommendations
concerning the role of the
press.
The
Hutchins Commission on Freedom of the
press was
established in 1942 and released a
major
report
of its findings in 1947.The
Commission members were sharply divided
between those who
held
strongly
libertarian views and those
who thought some form of
press regulation was
necessary. Those
who
favored regulation were fearful
that the marketplace of ideas was
much too vulnerable
to
subversion
by antidemocratic forces; most of them were
impressed by the Chicago
School.
Chicago
School
Chicago
School envisioned modern cities as
"Great Communities" comprising hundreds
of small social
groups-
everything from neighborhood social
organizations to citywide associations.
For these Great
Communities
to develop, all the constituent groups
had to work together and contribute.
These were
referred
to as pluralistic groups in recognition of
their cultural and racial
diversity.
The
Chicago School Opposed marketplace of
ideas notions and argued that
unregulated mass media
inevitably
served the interests and tastes of
large or socially dominant groups.
Small, weak,
pluralistic
groups
would be either neglected or
degraded.
This
perspective also held that
ruthless elites could use
media as a means of gaining personal
political
power.
These demagogues could
manipulate media to transmit propaganda to
fuel hatred and fear
among
a majority unite them against minorities,
e.g. as Hitler used the media to arouse
hatred against
the
Jews. Although majority of the
Hutchins commission members had some
sympathy for Chicago
School
ideas, they opposed any
direct form of press
regulation.
The
Commission members faced a serious
dilemma. On the one hand they recognized
that marketplace
of
ideas was not
self-regulating and the media were doing
less than they could to
provide services to
minority
groups. The members also feared
that any form of press
regulation would open the door
to
official
control of media the very thing
they were trying to prevent.
Without some form of
regulation,
a
ruthless and cunning demagogue might be
able to use hate propaganda to
gain power in the
United
States.
But establishing a national
press council might put
too much control in the
hands of existing
elites
and they might abuse
it.
16
Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
Ultimately
the Hutchins Commission members decided to place
their faith in media practitioners
and
call
on them to redouble their efforts to
serve the public.
The
synthesis of ideas put
forward in the Hutchins Commission report
has become known as the
Social
Responsibility
Theory of the Press. It emphasized the
need for an independent
press that scrutinizes
other
social institutions and provides
objective, accurate, news
reports.
The
most innovative feature of SR
theory was its call
for media to be responsible for
fostering
productive
and creative "Great
Communities". It said that media
should do this by prioritizing
cultural
pluralism-
by becoming the voice of all the
people- not just elite
groups or groups that had
dominated
national,
regional or local culture in the
past.
Dennis
McQuail in 1987 summarized the
basic principles of social responsibility
theory as the
following:-
1.
Media should accept and
fulfill certain obligations to
society.
2.
These obligations are mainly
to be met by setting high or
professional standards of
informativeness,
truth, accuracy, objectivity and
balance.
3.
In accepting and applying these
obligations, media should be
self-regulating within the
framework
of law and established
institutions.
4.
The media should avoid
whatever might lead to
crime, violence or civil
disorder or give offense
to
minority groups.
5.
The media as a whole should be
pluralist and reflect the diversity of
their society, giving
access
to
various points of view and to
rights of reply.
6.
Society and the public have a
right to expect high standards of
performance, and intervention
can
be justified to secure the public
good.
7.
Journalists and media professionals should be accountable to
society as well as to
employers
and
the market
SR
theory has proved quite
durable. Most journalists
take seriously the central values of
social
responsibility
theory such as pluralism and
cultural diversity.
An
example of a comprehensive code,
which
also has an international reference, is
the International Principles of
professional Ethics in
Journalism,
drawn up under the auspices of
UNESCO. Unlike most industry
codes, it does not use
the
word
`freedom' but refers frequently to
rights and responsibilities, there are
ten clauses headed and
summarized
as follows:
1.
People's right to true
information- the right of people to
express themselves freely
through the
media
of communication
2.
The journalistic dedication to
objective reality;- this
aims to provide public with
adequate
material
to facilitate the formation o an accurate
and comprehensive picture of the
world.
3.
The journalist's social
responsibility.- this emphasizes the
fact that journalistic
information is
social
good not just a
commodity
4.
The Journalist's Professional integrity.
This deals especially with
rights not to work
against
personal
conviction and other matters of personal
ethics.
5.
Public access and participation.
This includes the right of
rectification and
reply.
6.
Respect for privacy and
Human Dignity
7.
Respect for the Public
interest. This relates to respect
for the national community , it
democratic
institutions
and public morals
8.
Respect of Universal Values
and diversity of cultures. This calls
for respect for human
rights,
social
progress, national liberation,
peace, democracy.
9.
Elimination of War and Other
Great Evils confronting
humanity .This calls for abstention
from
justifying
aggression, arms proliferation ,
violence, hatred , discrimination.
10.
Promotion of a New World
information and communication order.
This is directed especially
at
the
need for decolonization and
democratization of information and
communication.
17
Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
However
there is little evidence that have
developed an effective means of
promoting these values
through
their work. E.g. journalists
continue to define the routine
work of community and
minority
groups
as non-newsworthy, inflammatory remarks
made by militant group
leaders are widely
publicized
with
no information about the social
conditions that prompt the
remarks.
Before
we proceed to discuss a contemporary
media movement designed to breathe new life
into social
responsibility
theory, let's first discuss
the Totalitarian media Theory.
Totalitarian
Media Theory
Totalitarian
media Theory is a normative theory
calling for suppression of
pluralistic groups and the use
of
media under the control of the dominant
political party to propagate a strong
centralized political
culture.
Just as libertarianism arose as an
alternative to authoritarian ideas,
social responsibility theory is
a
response to totalitarian ideas.
Totalitarian media theories, such as
those developed by the Nazis or
by
former
Soviet communists, called
for suppression of Pluralistic groups and
exalted the necessity
for
propagating
a strong centralized political culture.
Direct control of the media by the
dominant political
party
was seen as essential to
prevent deviant, disruptive
views from being expressed
by enemies of the
people.
The party whether it is
National Socialist or Soviet
Communist, must be trusted with
total
control
over media so that it can
educate the masses and lead them
into a utopian
future.
So
in contrast to totalitarianism theory, SR
theory encouraged media practitioners to
see themselves as
front-line
participants in the battle to preserve
democracy in a world drifting inexorably
toward
totalitarianism.
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