Federalism and mass media policy in Germany

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Series Title
Series Details Vol.13, No.2, Summer 2003, p106-126
Publication Date June 2003
ISSN 1359-7566
Content Type

Article abstract:

This article deals with the patterns of political change when political institutions are organised according to a logic that runs against the grain of the social structure. In particular, focus is on the federal constitution devised for Germany in 1949 and how the political system moved towards a closer match with the underlying social structure as political actors mobilised in nation-wide terms rather than following the federal demarcations. Despite explicit constitutional clauses, which place media under the exclusive jurisdiction of the German Länder, harmonisation and standardisation eventually led to the 'nationalisation' of German mass media. Empirical research shows that political actors differed over the contents of policies, but they shared an all-German frame of reference. This indicates that in federations with non-federal societies, the workings of the system might be more unified than what the de jure federal structure suggests.

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