Comm 251  International Communications (9/05)

 

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS MATERIALS

GENERAL COLLECTION - HIGH LIBRARY

 

Abu Bakr, Y.  (1985).  Development of communication in the Arab states:  Needs and priorities.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Agnew, H. L.  (2004).  The Czechs and the lands of the Bohemian crown.  Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press.

 

Akima, H.  (1981).  Broadcasting satellite and fixed satellite service considerations after the 1979 World Administrative Radio Conference.  Report #81-70.  Washington, DC: NTIS.

 

Akwule, R.  (1992).  Global telecommunications.  Boston:  Focal Press.

 

Albarran, A. & Chan-Olmsted, S. (eds.).  (1998).  Global media economics: Commercialization, integration of world media markets.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Alexandre, L.  (1988).  Voice of America:  From dŽtente to the Reagan doctrine.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Alexandrowic, C. H.  (197l).  The law of global communication.  New York:

Columbia University Press.

 

Alia, V.  (1999).  Uncovering the north: News, media and the Aboriginal people.  Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.

 

Alisky, M.  (1981).  Latin America media:  Guidance and censorship.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Alleyne, M. D.  (1997).  News revolution: Political & economic decisions about globalinformation.  New York:  St. Martin's Press.

 

Androunas, E.  (1993).   Soviet media in transition:  Structural and economic alternatives.  Westport, CN.:  Praeger.

 

Ansah, P. et al.  (1981).  Rural journalism in Africa.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Arno, A. & Dissanayake, W.  (1984).  The news media in national and international conflict.  Boulder, CO:  Westview Press. 

 

Asante, C. E.  (1996).  The press in Ghana: Problems and prospects.  Lanham,  MD:  University Press of America.

 

Assante, M. K., et. al.  (1979).  Handbook of intercultural communication.  New

York:  Sage Publications.

 

Atkinson, T. D.  (1996).  Merriam-Webster's guide to international business communications.  Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster.

 

Aumente, J., Gross, P., Hiebert, R., Johnson, O. & Mills, D.  (1999).  Eastern European journalism:  Before, during and after communism.  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton Press.

 

Austerlitz, P.  (1997).  Meringue: Dominican music and Dominican identity.  Philadelphia:  Temple University Press.

 

Bagdikian, B. H.  (1971).  The information machines:  Their impact on men and the media.  New York:  Harper and Row.

 

Bailie, M. & Winseck, D. R.  (1997).  Democratizing communication?: Comparative perspectives on information and power.  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton Press.

 

Baistow, T.  (1985).  Fourth rate estate:  An anatomy of Fleet Street.  London:

Comedia.

 

Bajpai, V. and Viswam, S.  (1986).  UNESCO:  In retrospect and prospect.  New Delhi:  Lancer International.

 

Ballard, E. G.  (1978).  Man and technology:  Toward the measurement of a culture.  Pittsburgh, PA:  Duquesne University Press.

 

Barker, C.  (1999).  Television, globalization and cultural identities.  London:  Open University Press.

 

Barton, R.  (1990).  Ties that bind in Canadian-American relations.  Hillsdale, NJ:  L. Erlbaum Associates.

 

Bau, T.   (1985).   The electronic estate:  New communications media in Australia.  New York:  Penguin Books.

 

Bauman, Z.  (1998).  Globalization: The human consequences.  New York:  Columbia University Press.

 

BBC World Source.  (1993).  Global audiences.  London:  John Libbey.

Becker, J., Hedebra, G. and Paldan L.  (1986).  Communication and domination.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Behrstock, J.  (1987).  The eighth case:  Troubled times at the United Nations.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

Benjamin, L. M.  (2001).  Freedom of the air and the public interest: First amendment rights in broadcasting to 1935.  Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.

 

Berberoglu, B.  (2004).  Nationalism and ethnic conflict: Class, state, and nation in the eye of globalization.  Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. 

 

Berrigan, F.  (1987).  Access:  Some western models of community media.  Paris: UNESCO.

 

Berry, W. E. & Nerone, J. C. (ed.).  (1995).  Last rights:  Revisiting four theories of the press.  Urbana, IL:  University of Illinois Press.

 

Bissessar, A. M.  (2002).  Policy transfer, new public management, and globalization:  Mexico and the car.  Lanham, MD: University Press of America.

 

Bittman, L.  (1985).  The KGB and Soviet disinformation.  New York:  Pergamon.

 

Blanchard, M A.  (1986).  Exporting the First Amendment.  Longman:  White

Plains.

 

Bloom, L. R., Hanson, A. G., Linfield, R. E. & Wortendyke, D. R.  (1980).  VIDEOTEX:

systems and services.  Report #80-50.  Washington, DC:  US Department of Commerce National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

 

Blumler, J.  (1984).  Communicating to voters:  Television in the first European

primary elections.  Beverly Hills, CA:  Sage.

 

Brown, S. & Schraub K. (eds.).  (1992).  Resolving third world conflict: Challenges for a new era. Washington, DC: U.S. Institute of Peace Press.

 

Bochner, S.  (1982).  Cultures in contact:  Studies in cross-cultural interaction.

London:  BBC.

 

Bourgault, L. M.  (1995).  Mass media in sub-Saharan Africa.  Bloomington, IN:  Indiana University Press.

 

Boyd, D. A.  (1993).  Broadcasting in the Arab world.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Boyd, D. A.  (1989).  Videocassette recorders in the third world.  New York:  Longman.

 

Boyd-Barrett, O. & Rantanen, T.  (1998).  The globalization of news.  Thousand Oaks, CA:  Sage Publications.

 

Braman, S. & Sreberny, A.  (1996).  Globalization, communication and transnational civil society.  Creskill, NJ:  Hampton.

 

Brasch, W. M. & Ulloth, D. B. (1986).  The press and the state:  Sociohistorical and contemporary interpretations.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

Brown, S. & Schraub, K. (eds.).  (1992).  Revolving third world conflict challenges for a new era.  Washington, DC:  U.S. Institute of Peace.

 

Browne, D. R.  (1989).  Comparing broadcast systems:  The experiences of six industrialized nations.  Ames, IA:  Iowa University Press.

 

Browne, D. R.  (1996).  Electronic media and indigenous peoples.  Ames, IA:  Iowa University Press.

 

Bruce, R. R.  (1986).  From telecommunications to electronic services:  A global

spectrum of definitions, boundary lines and structures.  London:  Butterworth.

 

Brugmans, G.  (2000).  The media and democracy in the Arab world.  Princeton, NJ: Films for the Humanities & Sciences.

 

Bruno, S. (ed.).  (1992).  Bulgarian communications:  1992 update.  Washington, DC:  Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

Butler, J.  (2003).  Religion in American life: A short history.  New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Calabrese, A.  (2004).  Toward a political economy of culture: Capitalism and communication in the twenty-first century.  Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

 

Calabrese, A.  (2003).  Voices of Europe: Citizens, referendums, and European integration.  Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

 

Caspi, D.  (1999).  The in/outsiders: The media in Israel.  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton Press.

 

Caughie, J.  (2000).  Television drama: Realism, modernism and British culture.  Oxford: Oxford University Press.

 

Cerni, D. M. & Grey, E. M.  (1993).  International telecommunications standards:

Issues and implications for the 80's.  A summary record of a July, 1982, workshop.  Report #83-15.  Washington, DC:  National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

 

Chan, J. M.  (2002).  In search of boundaries: Communication, nation-states, and cultural identities.  Westport, CT: Ablex.

 

Chander, R. & Karnik, K.  (1976).  Planning for satellite to broadcasting:

Indiana instructional television experiment.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Chang, K. & Chen, W.  (1998).  Reggae routes: The story of Jamaican music.  Philadelphia:  Temple University Press.

 

Chang, W. H.  (1989).  Mass media in China:  The history.  Ames, IA:  Iowa University Press.

Chapman, G., Kumar, K., Fraser, C. & Gaber, I.  (1997).  Environmentalism and the mass media: The north-south divide.  New York:  Routledge.

 

Cioffi-Revilla, C., Merritt, R. L. & Zinnes, D. A.  (1985).  Communication and interaction in global politics.  Beverly Hills, CA:  Sage Publications.

 

Coicaud, J.M.,  Doyle, M.W. & Gardner, A.M. (eds.)  (2003).  The globalization of human rights.  New York: United Nations University Press.

 

Cole, R.  (1996).  Communication in Latin America : Journalism, mass media, and society.  Wilmington, DE:  Scholarly Resources.

 

                .  (1977).  Communication policies in Columbia.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

               .  (1978).  Communication policies in the Republic of Korea.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

               .  (1985).  Conference on information, computers, and communications.  Brookefield, VT:  Barton.

 

Cooper, T. W.  (1989).  Communication ethics and global change.  White Plains, NY:  Longman.

 

Cooper-Chen, A.  (1997).  Mass communication in Japan.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Corcoran, F. J. & Preston, P.  (1995).  Democracy and communication in new Europe:  Change and continuity in east and west.  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton.

 

Couldry, N (ed).  (2003).  Contesting media power: Alternative media in a networked world.  Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

 

Crocker, C. & Hampson, F. O., (eds.).  (1996).  Managing global chaos: Sources of and responses to international conflict.  Washington, DC:  U.S. Institute of Peace Press.

 

Cross, M. (ed.).  (1996).  Advertising and culture: Theoretical perspective.  Westport, CT:  Praeger.

 

Curran, J., Gurevitch, M., & Woolacott, J.  (1977).  Mass communication and society.  London:  Edward Arnold Publishers.

 

Curry, J. L. & Dassin, J. R.  (1982).  Press control around the world.  New York:  Praeger.

 

da Costa, A. L., et al.  (1980).  News valves and principles of cross-cultural communication.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Dag Hammarskjold Library.  (1984).  New world information and communication order:  A selective bibliography.  New York:  United Nations.

 

Demers, D.  (ed).  (2002).  Global media news reader.  Washington:  Washington University Press.

 

Demers, D.  (ed).  (2003).  Terrorism, globalization & mass communication: Papers presented at the 2002 Center for Global Media Studies Conference .  Washington:  Washington University Press.

 

 

Demers, D. P.  (1999).  Global media:  Menace or messiah?  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton Press.

 

Defleur, M.  (2003).  Learning to hate Americans: How U.S. media shape negative opinions among teenagers in twelve countries.  Boston, MA: Boston University Press.

 

De La Garde, G. & Wechselmann W. (eds.).  (1993).  Small nations, big neighbor.  London:  J. Libbey.

 

De Moragas Spa, M., Garitaonandia, C. & Lopez, B. (eds.).  (1999).  TV on your doorstep:  Decentralization experiences in the European Union.  Luton, UK:  University of Luton Press.

 

Deibert, R. J.  (1997).  Parchment, printing & hypermedia: Communication in

world order transformation.  New York:  Columbia.

 

               .  (1998)  The development of the audiovisual landscape in central Europe since 1989.  Luton, UK:  University of Luton Press.

 

Dias Bordenave, J.E.  (1977).  Communication and rural development.  Paris: UNESCO.

 

Dias, M. A. R. et al.  (1979).  National communication policy councils.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Dibie, R. A.  (2001).  The politics and policies of Sub-Saharan Africa. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. 

 

Dikshit, K. et al.  (1979).  Rural radio:  Programme formats.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Dizard, W.  (1987).  Gorbachev's information revolution:  Controlling glasnost.  Boulder, CO:  Westview Press.

 

Donahue, R. T.  (1998).  Japanese culture & communication:  Critical cultural analysis.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

Dougan, Lady D., et. al.  (1990).  Broadcast diversity in Eastern Europe:  Challenges for the 1990's.  Washington, DC:  CSIS International Communications Studies Program.

 

Dougan, Lady D., et. al. (1992).  New European satellite smorgasbord:  Dishing up policies and technologies of the 1990's.  Washington, DC:  International Communication Studies Program:  Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

Dovring, K.  (1997).  English as Lingua Franca: Double talk in global persuasion. 

Westport, CT:  Praeger.

 

Drummond, P. & Patterson, R.  (1986).  Television in transition: Papers from the first International Television Studies Conference.  London:  British Film Institute.

 

Dunn, H.  (1995).  Globalization, communications, and Caribbean identity.  New York:  St. Martin's Press.

Dunnett, P. J. S.  (1988).  The world newspaper industry.  New York:  Croom Helm.

 

Dupagne, M. & Seel, P.  (1998).  High definition television: A global perspective.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

du Toit, P.  (1995).  State building and democracy in Southern Africa.  Washington, DC:  U.S. Institute of Peace Press.

 

Dyson, K. & Humphreys, P. (eds.).  (1986).  The politics of the communications revolution in Western Europe.  London:  Cass.

 

Edgar, P. & Rahim, S. A.  (1963).  Communication policy in developed countries.  London:  Kegan and Paul International.

 

Elliot, G.  (1984).  Video production in education and training.  London:  Croon Helm.

 

Elluel, J.  (1981).  Perspectives on our age:  Jacques Elluel speaks on his life and work.  New York:  Harper and Row.

 

Elluel, J.  (1967).  Technological society.  New York:  Random House.

 

               .  (1977).  Ethnicity and the media:  An analysis of media reporting in the United Kingdom, Canada and Ireland.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Eugster, E.  (1983).  Television programming across national boundaries:  The

EBU and OIRT.  Dedham, MA:  Artech House.

 

               .  (1983).  An exploration of legal issues in information and communications technologies.  Washington, DC:  Organization for Economic Cooperation and

Development Publications Center.

 

Faringer, G. L.  (1991).  Press freedom in Africa.  New York:  Praeger.

 

Farnsworth, R. M.  (1996).  From vagabond to journalist:  Edgar Snow in Asia, 1928-

1941.  Columbia, MO:  University of Missouri Press.

 

Fejes, F.  (1986).  Imperialism, media and the good neighbor:  New deal foreign policy and United States shortwave.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Feldman, O.  (1993).  Politics and the news media in Japan.  Ann Arbor, MI:  University of Michigan Press.

 

Fenby, J.  (1986).  The international news services:  A twentieth century end report.  New York:  Schocken Books.

 

Firestone, C.  (1987).  International satellite and cable television.  Los Angeles, CA:

UCLA School of Law.

 

Fisher, D.  (1982).  The right to communicate:  A status report.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Fisher, G.  (1979).  American communication in a global society.  Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Flesch, C.  (1991).  European community communication policies:  An update.  Washington, DC:  Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

Flournoy, D. & Steward, R.  (1997).  CNN making news in the global market. Bedfordshire, UK: University of Luton Press.

 

Fonseca, J. M.  (1977).  Communication policies in Costa Rica.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Foster, G.  (1979).  Traditional societies and technological change.  (2nd ed.).  New

York:  Harper and Row.

 

Fox, E.  (1997).  Latin American broadcasting: From tango to telenovela.  Luton: Luton University Press.

 

Fox, E.  (1988).  Media and politics in Latin America:  The struggle for democracy.  New York:  Sage Publications.

 

Franda, M. F.  (2002).  China and India online: Information technology politics and diplomacy in the world's two largest nations.  Lanham, MD:  Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

 

Frederick, H. H.  (1986).  Cuban-American radio wars:  Ideology in international telecommunications.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Frederick, H.  (1993).  Global communications and international relations.  Belmont, CA:  Wadsworth Publishing Corp.

 

Frith, K. T.  (1996).  Advertising in Asia.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Frith, K. T.  (2003).  Advertising in societies: Global issues.  Ames, IA: Iowa State University Press.

 

Frost, J.  (1987).  World radio and TV handbook.  New York:  Watson-Guptill.

 

Fulcher, J.  (2004).  Capitalism: A very short introduction.  New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Galtung, J.  (1992).   Global glasnost: Toward a new world information and communication order?  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton.

 

Ganly, G. & Ganley, O.  (1986).  The political implications of the global

spread of videocassette recorders and programming.  Cambridge, MA:  Harvard Program on Information Resource Policy.

 

Gerbner, G., Mowlana, H. & Nordenstreng, K.  (1993).  Global media debate:  It's rise, fall and renewal.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Gershon, R. A.  (1997).  The transnational media corporation-global messages and free market competition.  Mahwah, NJ:  Lawrence Erlbaum.

 

Gibbs, J.  (1999).  Gorbachev's glasnot: The soviet media in the first phase of perestroika.  College Station:  Texas A & M University Press.

 

Gibbons, A.  (1986).  Information, ideology & communications:  The new nations perspectives on an intellectual revolution.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

Giffard, A. C.  (1989).  UNESCO and the media.  New York:  Longman.

 

Glasser, T. L.  (1999).  The idea of public journalism.  New York:  Guilford Press.

 

Glenow-Hecht, J.  (1999).  The transmission impossible: American journalism as cultural diplomacy in postwar Germany, 1945-55.  Baton Rouge, LA:  Louisiana State University Press.

 

               .  (1996).  Global corruption: Where are the watchdogs?  Arlington, VA:  Freedom Forum.

 

Golding, P. & Harris, P.  (1996).  Beyond cultural imperialism: Globalization, communication and the new international order.  Thousand Oaks, CA:  Sage Publications.

 

Gonzalez, A. & Tanno, D. V. (eds.).  (1997).  Politics, communication and

 culture.  Thousand Oaks, CA:  Sage Publications.

 

Graff, R. D.  (1983).  Communications for national development:  Lessons from

experience.  Boston:  Oelgeschlager, Gunn and Hain.

 

Graham S. P.  (2000).  British television:  An insider's history.  Jefferson, NC:  McFarland.

 

Gross, L. S.  (1995).  The international world of electronic media.  New York:  McGraw-Hill.

 

Gross, P.  (1996).  Mass media in revolution and national development:  The Romanian laboratory.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Guback, T. & Varis, T.  (1982).  Transnational communication and cultural industries.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Gudykunst, W. B. et. al.  (1985).  Communication, culture, and organizational

processes.  New York:  Sage Publications.

 

Gunaratne, S. (ed.).  (2000).  Handbook of the media in Asia.  Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

 

Hachten, W. A.  (1981).  World news prism:  Changing media, clashing ideologies.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Hachten, W. A. & Hachten, H.  (1993).  Growth of media in the third world.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Hafez, K.  (2001).  Mass media, politics, and society in the middle east.  Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, Inc.

 

Hafez, K.  (1999).  Islam and the west in the mass media:  Fragmented images in a globalizing world.  Cresskill, NJ:  Hampton Press, Inc.

 

Hall, S.  (1997).  Representation and the media.  Northhampton, MA:  Media Education Association.

 

Hamilton, J. M.  (1986).  Main street America and the third world.  Cabin John, MD: Seven Locks Press.

 

Hamilton, S.  (2001).  Indian philosophy: A very short introduction.  Oxford: Oxford University Press.

 

Hancock, A.  (1981).  Communication planning for development:  An operational framework.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Hancock, A.  (1984).  Technology transfer and communication.  Paris:  UNESCO.

 

Hansen, A. C.  (1983).  USIA:  Public diplomacy in the computer age.  New York:

Praeger.

 

Hardiman, D.  (2003).  Gandhi in his time and ours: The global legacy of his ideas.  New York: Columbia University Press.

 

Harrison, P. & Palmer, R.  (1986).  News out of Africa:  Biafra to band-aid.  London: Hilary Shipman.

 

Hartley, J.  (1985).  Making sense of the media:  A course in media studies. 

London:  Milton Boyars and Comedia Publishing Group.

 

Hartmann, P.  (1989).  The mass media & village life:  An Indian study.  New York: Sage Publications.

 

Hayward, P (ed).  (1990).  Culture, technology & creativity in the late twentieth century.  London: J. Libby.

 

Head, S. W.  (1985).  World broadcasting systems.  New York:  Wadsworth.

 

Hedebro, G.  (1982).  Communication and social change in developing countries:  A critical view.  Ames, IA:  Iowa State University Press.

 

Henshaw, K.G.  (2004).  A history of Japan: From stone age to superpower.  New York: Palgarve Macmillan.

 

Hereniko, V.  (1999).  Inside out:  Literature, cultural politics and identity in the new Pacific.  Lanham, MD:  Rowman & Littlefield.

 

Hiemstra, J. L.  (1997).  Worldviews in the air:  The struggle to create a pluralism broadcasting system in the Netherlands.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

               .  (    ).  Historical background of the mass media declaration.  New York:  UNESCO. 

 

Hodges, D. C.  (1999).  The literate communist:  150 years of the Communist manifesto.  New York:  Lang.

 

Holmes, D.  (1986).  Governing the press:  Media freedom in the U. S and

Great Britain.  Boulder, CO:  Westview Press.

 

Holmes, P. A.  (1999).  Broadcasting in Sierra-Leone.  Lanham, MD:  University Press of America.

 

Hong, J.  (1998).  The internationalization of television in China:  The evolution of ideology, society, and the media since the reform.  Westport, CT:  Praeger.

 

Hornik, R.  (1988).  Development communication:  Information, agriculture and nutrition in the Third World.  New York:  Longman.

 

Hoskins, C., McFadyen, S. & Finn, A.  (1997).  Global television and film: An Intro to the economics of the business.  New York:  Oxford University Press.

 

Howell, Jr., W. J.  (1986).  World broadcasting in the age of the satellite.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Hudson, H. E.  (1984).  When telephones reach the village.  Norwood, NJ:  Ablex Publishing Corp.

 

Huffman, J. L.  (1997).  Creating a public:  People and press in Meiji, Japan.  Honolulu, HI:  University of Hawaii Press.

 

Humphrey, C. S.  (1996).  The press of the young republic, 1783-1833.  Westport, CT:  Greenwood.

 

Inayatullah, S. & Leggett, S. (eds.).  (2001).  Transforming communication: Technology, sustainability and future generation. Westport, CT:  Greenwood.

 

Inglis, A. F.  (1997).  Satellite technology: An introduction.  Boston, Mass: Focal Press.

 

               .  (1982).  International telecommunications.  Law and contemporary problems.  Durham, NC:  School of Law, Duke University.

 

James, J.  (1983).  Consumer choice in the third world:  A study of the welfare

effects of advertising and new products in a developing country.  New York:

St. Martin's Press.

 

Jandt, F.  (2001).  Intercultural communication.  Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

 

Jayaweera, N.  (1986).  The political economy of the communication revolution and the third world:  A theoretical analysis.  Singapore:  Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Centre.  

 

Jennings, P.  (1987).  USA/USSR spacebridge:  The role of the media in current relations.  New York:  Center for Communication.  (Videotape)

 

Jensen, C.  (1996).  Censored:  The news that didn't make the news.  New York:  Seven Stories Press.

 

Johnson, C., Calhoun, J. & Bruno, S. (eds.).  (1992).  United States and Canada:  The hidden borders of telecom summary report, Washington, D.C., June 12, 1992.  Washington, DC:  Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

Johnston, C. B.  (1998).  Global news access: The impact of new communications technologies.  Westport, CT: Praeger.

 

Jones, A.  (1996).  Powers of the press:  Newspapers, power and the public nineteenth century England.  Aldenshot, England:  Scolar Press.

 

Kalin, M. J.  (1985).  Telecommunications policies in ten countries:  Prospects for future competitive access.  Report #85-33.  Washington, DC:  U. S. Dept. of Commerce:  National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

 

Kamalipour, Y. R. & Carilli, T.  (1998).  Cultural diversity and the U. S. media.  Albany, NY:  State University of New York Press.

 

Kamalipour, Y. R.  (1994).  The U.S. media and the middle east.  Westport, CT:  Greenwood Press.

 

Kao, K.  (1998).  Communicating effectively with the Chinese.  Thousand Oaks, CA:  Sage Publications.

 

Kaplar, R.  (1995).  The government factor.  Washington, DC:  Cato Institute.

 

Karatnycky, A.  (2003).  Nations in transit 2003:  Democratization in East Central Europe and Eurasia.  Lanham, MD: Freedom House.

 

Karin, K. H.  (2000).  Islamic peril: Media and the global violence.  New York: Black Rose Books.

 

Karlekar, K. D.  (2003).  Freedom of the press 2003: A global survey of media independence.  Lanham, MD: Freedom House.

 

Katzen, M.  (1982).  Multi-media communications.  London:  Frances Pinter.

 

Kelly, S.  (1978).  Access denied:  The politics of censorship.  Lanham, MD:

University Press of America.

 

Kennedy, G. A.  (1998).  Comparative rhetoric:  An historical and cross-cultural

introduction.  New York:  Oxford University Press.

 

Kim, Y. Y.  (1987).  Interethnic communication.  New York:  Sage Publications.

 

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