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Globalization and the public sphere

by: Nick Couldry, Tanja Dreher
Global Media and Communication, Vol. 3, No. 1. (1 April 2007), pp. 79-100, doi:10.1177/1742766507074360  Key: citeulike:11180774

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Abstract

Recent accounts of Habermas's conception of the public sphere concern the interlocking of multiple networks and spaces. In a global context new interfaces between existing (counter-) public spheres can lead to multiple counter-publics. This article explores this phenomenon through the examination of the communicative spaces that offer alternatives to Australia's mainstream public sphere from three different strands of Sydney's community media: diasporic media (Assyrian Radio SBS), Indigenous media (Koori Radio) and discursive sites that operate in between ethnic and mainstream media (Forum for Australia's Islamic Relations).


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