Theories in International Communication
Theories in International Communication
Theories in International Communication
Approaches to Theorizing
International Communication
Formation of Theories
• Theories offer ways of approaching the subject of
International communication.
▫ At the end of the First World War the main focus
remained on the effects of communication by the
Imperial powers.
▫ The formation of “public opinion” by Walter
Lippmann (1922).
▫ The propagation of wartime “propaganda” by Harold
Lasswell (1927).
Formation of Theories
• Two broad but often interrelated approaches to
theorizing international communication can be
seen. These are;
▫ Political Economy approach.
▫ Cultural Studies approach.
Formation of Theories
• Political Economy
Approach.
• Propagated by Karl Marx, focuses
on and questions the underlying According to Karl Marx;
structures of economic and “The class which has the means of
political power running the material production has control at
system. the same time over the means of
• It is a critical research which mental production so that, the
examines the patterns of ideas of those who lack the means
ownership and production in the of mental production are subject to
media & communication industry. it… Therefore, the ruling class
• The content of media systems is regulates the production and
analyzed within the context of distribution of the ideas of their
social and economic power age: Thus their ideas are the
relations based on national and ruling ideas of that epoch”.
transnational interests.
Formation of Theories
• Cultural Studies Approach.
• Focuses on the role of communication & media in creating and
maintaining shared values and meanings.
• Growing research in this field has enabled this approach to
become increasingly influential.
• Started in Britain in the 1970’s with the study of popular culture
and their role in the reproduction of social hegemony &
inequality.
• It focused on how media texts work to create meaning and how
culturally situated individuals work to gather meaning from texts.
• Cultural study scholars assert that people create their own
meaning from the texts they receive from the media.
Theories of International Communication
• Free flow of Information
• Modernization theory
• Dependency theory
• Structural Imperialism
• Hegemony
• The Public Sphere
• Cultural Studies
Free flow of Information
• The “free flow” doctrine was essentially a part of the liberal, free
market discourse.
• Championed the rights of media proprietors to sell wherever and
whatever they wished - Propagated media proprietors rights.
• The concept of “free flow” served both economic and political
players - Perpetuation of Capitalism.
• For Western governments “free flow” helped to ensure the
continuing and unreciprocated influence of western media on
global markets.
• It also strengthened the West in its ideological battle against the
Soviet Union.
• It provided a vehicle for the US government to inject its views on
international audiences.
Modernization theory
• Western nations assumed that International
communication was the key to the process of
modernization and development in the Third World.