Acting in the Name of Culture? The Participation of Organized Labour in the Canadian Broadcasting Policy Process

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Acting in the Name of Culture? The Participation of Organized Labour in the Canadian Broadcasting Policy Process
Abstract
The thesis examines the role, efficacy and influence of the five national English-language independent film and television production sector unions in the Canadian broadcasting policy network. While labour is typically classified as a civil society organization within policy networks studies, this thesis will examine the blanket applicability of this typology in analysing labour's engagement with issues that involve both their vested economic/industrial interests as well as broader social/cultural goals, using the unions' engagement with the issue of Canadian dramatic programming from 1998 to present as a case study.
Type
Master of Arts, Communication and Culture
University
Toronto Metropolitan University
Place
Toronto
Date
2005
# of Pages
107 pages
Language
English
Short Title
Acting in the Name of Culture?
Accessed
7/24/23, 8:17 PM
Library Catalog
rshare.library.torontomu.ca
Citation
Coles, A. (2005). Acting in the Name of Culture? The Participation of Organized Labour in the Canadian Broadcasting Policy Process [Master of Arts, Communication and Culture, Toronto Metropolitan University]. https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14649285.v1