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El. knyga: Broadcast Indecency: F.C.C. Regulation and the First Amendment

(University of Nebraska at Omaha, USA)

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Broadcast Indecency (1997) treats broadcast indecency as more than a simple regulatory problem in American law. The author’s approach cuts across legal, social and economic concerns, taking the view that media law and regulation cannot be seen within a vacuum that ignores cultural realities. It treats broadcast as a phenomenon challenging the policy approach of government regulation, and is an exploration of the political and social processes involved in the government control of mass media content.



Broadcast Indecency (1997) treats broadcast indecency as more than a simple regulatory problem in American law. The author’s approach cuts across legal, social and economic concerns, taking the view that media law and regulation cannot be seen within a vacuum that ignores cultural realities.

1. An Introduction to Issues in Broadcast Indecency
2. Conceptual
Problems of Policy and Application
3. Origins of the Concept of Indecent
4.
Mass Communicators: Gender and Theoretical Issues
5. A Content Analysis of
Nonactionable Broadcasts
6. The Role of Audience and Community in Complaints
7. Branton v. FCC: The Redefinition of Listener Standing
8. The Social
Construction of Howard Stern: Shock Jocks and Their Listeners
9. The Question
of Effects from Indecent Broadcasts
10. Making Money: Advertising and the
Issue of Broadcast Indecency
11. United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit Influence: The ACT Cases and Regulatory
Ambiguity
12. Broadcast Indecency and First Amendment Theory: The Future of
Regulation in an International Context