Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Three Definitions of Knowledge Soceity

.Broadly speaking, the term Knowledge Society refers to any society where knowledge is the primary production resource instead of capital and labour. It may also refer to the use a certain society gives to information. A Knowledge society "creates, shares and uses knowledge for the prosperity and well-being of its people
source:www.answers.com

2. In Sally Burch's work, he refers to Castells definition which says, “it has to do with a society in which the conditions for generating knowledge and processing information have been substantially changed by a technological revolution focused on information processing, knowledge generation, and information technologies.”
(http://vecam.org/article517.html)

3.Knowledge societies have the characteristic that knowledge forms major component of any human activity. Economic, social, cultural, and all other human activities become dependent on a huge volume of knowledge and information. A knowledge society is one in which knowledge becomes major creative force.
(http://dictionary.babylon.com/Knowledge_Society)

Nii Quarcoopome Hansen-Sackey
DCSA 2010058

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Three Definitions of Information Society

1.An information society is a society in which the creation, distribution, diffusion, use, integration and manipulation of information is a significant economic, political, and cultural activity.
source - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/information_society.

2.Information Society is a term for a society in which the creation, distribution, and manipulation of information has become the most significant economic and cultural activity.
source - whatis.techtarget.com/definition

3.Post-industrial society in which information technology (IT) is transforming every aspect of cultural, political, and social life and which is based on the production and distribution of information
source - www.businessdictionary.com/definition/information-society
NII QUARCOOPOME HANSEN-SACKEY
DCSA 2010058

Friday, May 22, 2009

THE DIFFERENCE AND SIMILARITIES OF LIBERTARIAN AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY THEORIES

The social responsibility and the libertarian theories were formulated to establish what is supposed to be done and what is being done by the media, thus the media practice. These theories are mostly dependent on a country’s political system.

According to McQuail, “the theory of Social Responsibility involves the views of the media ownership as a form of public or stewardship rather than an unlimited private franchise”.

The Social Responsibility Theory and the Libertarian Theory both enable the media to express themselves freely. They both lay emphasis on on freedom of expression. The media are free to publish information for the public.

However, the Libertarian Theory is democracy and individual freedom based. It stresses on democracy, personal liberty and the freedom of expression of ideas with the only limitation being the ability to pay while the Social Responsibility Theory has the society in mind and does not publish any material to the disadvantage of the state. Thus governments should just not allow full freedom but it must actively promote it.

Furthermore, under the Social Responsibility Theory the media (which is state owned) is restricted in its expression of ideas by code of ethics set to govern the media whereas under the Libertarian Theory the media (which is private owned) is not restricted because it is private owned.

These two theories were formulated to help the media to be able to get the freedom they deserved to be able to carry out their functions of educating, informing and entertaining the pubic.

Reference

Mass communication, an introduction by McQuail

Journal article by Scott Lloyd; Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Vol. 6, 1991

NII QUARCOOPOME HANSEN-SACKEY

DCSA 2010058

Thursday, May 14, 2009

my first blog

hi,
I'm Nii Quarcoopome, a diploma student in Ghana Institute of Journalism.
Welcome to my blog and feel free to post your comment.