2021
DOI: 10.2478/nor-2021-0016
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Media policy in Greenland

Abstract: This article describes the historical development of media policy in Greenland, and the shifts in the underlying normative and causal ideas that legitimise media policy. I argue that media policy reflects changes in Greenland's political system. Specifically, under colonial rule, Greenlandic media was state run and media was seen as an instrument to educate the population. Gradually, with the introduction of home rule, a paradigm shift took place, whereby media was seen as a vital instrument to strengthen Gree… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Similarly, studies of a dozen microstates in the English-speaking Caribbean (Storr, 2016;Veenendaal, 2013) as well as Malta (Veenendaal, 2019) showed how dominating governments leave media little room to maneuver. In Greenland, the government likewise plays a dominant role in, for example, media advertising and as a news source (Hussain, 2019;Ravn-Højgaard, 2021). Singh (2020) has studied the challenges of the media in the four microstates of Melanesia: Fiji, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.…”
Section: Dominating Governmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, studies of a dozen microstates in the English-speaking Caribbean (Storr, 2016;Veenendaal, 2013) as well as Malta (Veenendaal, 2019) showed how dominating governments leave media little room to maneuver. In Greenland, the government likewise plays a dominant role in, for example, media advertising and as a news source (Hussain, 2019;Ravn-Højgaard, 2021). Singh (2020) has studied the challenges of the media in the four microstates of Melanesia: Fiji, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.…”
Section: Dominating Governmentmentioning
confidence: 99%