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Making cultural policy: meeting cultural objectives in a digital environment
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Making cultural policy: meeting cultural objectives in a digital environment

Tom O'Regan and Ben Goldsmith
Television & New Media, Vol.7(1), pp.68-91
2006
url
https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476403253922View
Published Version

Abstract

Film, Television and Digital Media Communication and Media Studies Cultural Studies broadcasting and film policy convergence cultural policy information economy services sector cultural organizations audiovisual production
Policy makers face a number of difficulties meeting the traditional cultural and social objectives of broadcasting and film policy development in a rapidly changing digital environment. This new environment requires broadcasting policy and film policy alike to substantially adjust their settings to "speak to" new governmental, industry, and political priorities. Broadcasting and film policy-making frameworks now need to adjust to policy and industry settings stressing the knowledge economy and information society. This both creates a new centrality for audiovisual production as a "content creation" industry and raises new problems for the various local film and television production ecologies (including the cultural policy that has sustained them) that have developed. This article will use Australian developments to suggest ways broadcasting and film policy is both making and not making this adjustment.

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