The MacBride Report:
Its Value to a New
Generation
By Andrew Calabrese*
In press in Quaderns del CAC [quarterly journal of the Catalonian Broadcasting Council]
The year 2005 marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the
report of UNESCO’s International Commission for the Study of Communication
Problems, Many Voices, One World,
more commonly known as “The MacBride Report.” The MacBride Report was written
in a much different global context than we witness today. In 1980, the Cold War
had a pronounced influence on geopolitical alliances, and the choice to be
“non-aligned” was in reference to this great polarity. The MacBride Report, and
the call for a “new world information and communication order” (NWICO) that
followed, precipitated the decision by the
The underlying ideological position of the
Today, modern media technologies, particularly the Internet and satellite communication, have become the infrastructure that has made possible a new global market system and a new context for the spread of political, economic and cultural ideas. Emerging with these new powers have come opportunities for the elimination of global poverty and the greater capacity for citizens of the world to bear witness to and fight against violations of human rights, wherever they may happen. But alongside the many positive changes are the perils that must be avoided, not least of which are the uses of these new means of communication by some to violate the dignity and humanity of others through public deception, economic exploitation, political surveillance and repression, and other abuses of power.
The decision by the
The WSIS, which met in Geneva in 2003 and will culminate in
Tunis in November 2005, represented for many people throughout the world,
particularly in the global South, new hope for making important progress in
articulating global norms and related policies in the area of communication
rights. Global, or at least transnational, policy-making is not a recent
phenomenon, although the degree of public participation in global policy forums
arguably is on the rise. That broadened participation has been represented as
the voice of “civil society” – that part of social life that is often
distinguished from the state and the corporate sector – in the generation of a
worldwide public discourse about the future of communication rights and the
global policies that are needed to secure them. Of course, there are grounds
for disagreement about how unified the voice of “civil society” is, given the
inherent non-singularity that characterizes the history of the very idea of
civil society, and given the broad range of issues that were brought to the
WSIS under the banner of that idea (Calabrese, 2004b). Those issues include the
communication rights of indigenous groups, workers, women, children, and
persons with disabilities; intellectual property; community media; open source
software; access to information and the means of communication; global
citizenship and much more (Civil Society Declaration, 2003). At the WSIS in
Much has changed since the MacBride Report was published, not only in global politics, but also in global communication. The year 2005 and the WSIS do not mark a stopping point in a global dialogue about the right to communicate, but this year is an auspicious occasion to commemorate the political legacy of the MacBride Report. Despite the geopolitical limitations that filtered the contributions of its authors, they had the foresight to hope for a kind of “globalization” that, rather than signify divisions among citizens of the world, acknowledged our common humanity. With all of its flaws, for which progressive communication activists understandably have distanced themselves over the past twenty-five years, the MacBride Report projects a spirit of hopefulness about how a better world is possible, about the continued importance of public institutions as means to ensure global justice at local, national, and transnational levels, and about the value of global communication as a means to knowledge, understanding and mutual respect. For these reasons, the anniversary of the MacBride Report should be celebrated, and the complexity of its legacy understood, by a new generation of communication rights activists.
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* Andrew
Calabrese is an associate professor at the