Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
The 1981 Kent commission report on newspapers is discussed and contrasted with the MacBride (UNESCO) report. The former assumes that competition is the major safeguard of diversity; the latter, written from the perspective of Third World countries, regards social inequality as the primary obstacle to the free flow of information. Together they reflect contemporary controversies about modernization. Trends toward rationalization, professionalization and autonomy are examined. Neither approach, Kent or MacBride, provides a satisfactory interpretation of Quebec's francophone press. An alternative model based on access is, we suggest, closer to the realities of Canada's changing political culture and class structure.
Dans cet article on compare le rapport de la Commission Kent sur les journaux avec le rapport MacBride (UNESCO). La point de départ du premier est que la concurrence est la meilleure garantie pour la diversité de l'information; le deuxième, écrit à travers la perspective des pays du Tiers monde, considère l'inégalité sociale comme l'obstacle plus important à la libre circulation de l'information. Les deux rapports reflètent de discussions actuelles concernant la modernisation; ils examinent les tendances vers la rationalisation, la professionnalisation et l'autonomie. Mais ni le rapport Kent, ni le rapport MacBride donnent une interprétation satisfaisante de la presse francophone au Québec. Un modèle alternatif fondé dans l'accès serait plus près de la réalité canadienne, en ce qui concerne aussi bien les transformations de la culture politique que la structure de classes.
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