Acting in the name of culture? Organized labour campaigns for Canadian dramatic programming

A Coles - Canadian Journal of Communication, 2006 - cjc.utpjournals.press
Canadian Journal of Communication, 2006cjc.utpjournals.press
This article has two main objectives: to identify a link between organized labour representing
English-language independent Canadian film and television production workers and
developments in Canadian broadcasting policy, and to analyze the complex role of labour
within the Canadian broadcasting policy network. The author uses union interventions
around the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission's 1999
Television Policy and the decline in Canadian dramatic programming as a case study to …
This article has two main objectives: to identify a link between organized labour representing English-language independent Canadian film and television production workers and developments in Canadian broadcasting policy, and to analyze the complex role of labour within the Canadian broadcasting policy network. The author uses union interventions around the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission’s 1999 Television Policy and the decline in Canadian dramatic programming as a case study to analyze the strategy and efficacy of labour’s involvement in the broadcasting policymaking process. She argues that labour’s adoption of a coalition framework, with the formation of the Coalition of Canadian Audio-visual Unions, has positively impacted labour’s power as policy actors in the Canadian broadcasting policy sphere.
University of Toronto Press
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