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The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: The Role of Military Journals

The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: The Role of Military Journals
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 38
Release: 1980
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Rand Corporation is conducting a multiyear comparative study of the role of the media in intra-elite communication in Communist countries. Western analysts of the political process in "closed" Communist systems necessarily rely heavily on the published and broadcast output of the mass and specialized media. These media are in part propaganda organs, but they also have other functions. A generation of Sovietologists has had to base much of its analysis of policies and politics on interpretations of media nuances. Yet their assumptions about the relationship between the media and the political actors whose behavior or attitudes are inferred from them have received little attention. The Rand study was initiated to fill this need. Its emphasis is not on techniques of content analysis, but rather on the process by which politically significant material appears in Communist-country media. The principal data base of the study is information obtained from interviews with 44 emigres formerly involved in the media process as writers, journalists, editors, censors, and government and Party officials. The results of this study are published in a Summary Report, which provides an overview and conclusions, and in a series of Rand Notes, which contain more detailed analyses and documentation of the research. This Note documents the organization and functioning of Polish military media. "Military media" is a category that embraces a range of publications issued by and addressed to officers and soldiers of the Polish armed forces. In terms of intended rank of audience, publications range from the classified bulletins and theoretical journals directed at senior officers to an illustrated weekly for enlisted men. In terms of function and content, military publications fall into one of two quite distinct categories: "professional" or "political" organs. Additionally, the Ministry of Defense Publishing House publishes a variety of military (and nonmilitary) books.


The Media and Intra-elite Communication in Poland

The Media and Intra-elite Communication in Poland
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 1983
Genre:
ISBN:

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This Annex supplements Section I, "Organization of Polish Military Media," of Rand Note N-1514/3, "The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: The Role of Military Journals," December 1980, by A. Ross Johnson. The Annex was prepared by Michael Sadykiewicz, a Rand consultant. The author, a former Polish army officer, has published articles in many Polish military journals and has served on the editorial board of the ground forces journal, "Przeglad Wojsk Ladowych." Section I of this Annex presents a typology of the Polish military press. The typology classifies the Polish military press according to the following 10 criteria: Purpose, Accessibility, Publication Level, Publication Frequency, Area of Interest, Targeted Audience, Content, Circulation, Financing of Circulation, and Printers. Section II presents a chart showing the organization of the Polish military press system. Section III lists members of the editorial committees of "Przeglad Wojsk Ladowych" and "Mysl Wojskowa."


The Media and Intra-elite Communication in Poland

The Media and Intra-elite Communication in Poland
Author: Jane Leftwich Curry
Publisher:
Total Pages: 62
Release: 1981
Genre: Political Science
ISBN:

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Summarizes the major features of the Polish media system, describes the specific roles and editorial processes of major types of media, and analyzes the relationship between divergences of view that appear in the media and intra-elite discussion, debate, and controversy. Conclusions are presented for Western analysts, whose understanding of Polish affairs is based at least partly on a reading of the open Polish media. The report emphasizes the process by which politically significant material appears in the media of a Communist country, in contrast to earlier studies, which are generally based on content analysis. The principal data source is information obtained from extensive interviews with emigres formerly involved in the media process, as writers, journalists, editors, censors, and government and Party officials. Detailed analyses and documentation of the research are presented in companion Notes N-1514/1, N-1514/2, N-1514/3, N-1514/4, N-1514/5.


The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: Organization and Control of the Media

The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: Organization and Control of the Media
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 110
Release: 1980
Genre:
ISBN:

Download The Media and Intra-Elite Communication in Poland: Organization and Control of the Media Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The Rand Corporation is conducting a multiyear comparative study of the role of the media in intra-elite communication in Communist countries. Western analysts of the political process in "closed" Communist systems necessarily rely heavily on the published and broadcast output of the mass and specialized media. These media are in part propaganda organs, but they also have other functions. A generation of Sovietologists has had to base much of its analysis of policies and politics on interpretations of media nuances. Yet their assumptions about the relationship between the media and the political actors whose behavior or attitudes are inferred from them have received little attention. The Rand study was initiated to fill this need. Its emphasis is not on techniques of content analysis, but rather on the process by which politically significant material appears in Communist-country media. The principal data base of the study is information obtained from interviews with 44 emigres formerly involved in the media process as writers, journalists, editors, censors, and government and Party officials. The results of this study are published in a Summary Report, which provides an overview and conclusions, and in a series of Rand Notes, which contain more detailed analyses and documentation of the research. This Note examines the structural and organizational factors that influence the output of Polish media. Section II reviews the changing position of the media in the Polish Communist system in the postwar period and provides a basis for understanding both the important general distinctions among the Stalinist, 1956, Gomulka, and Gierek periods and related changes in the instruments of Party control. Section III examines the various instruments by which the Party exercises direct and indirect supervision over the media. Sections IV and V describe key elements of the internal organization and editorial process, respectively, that affect the output of Polish media organs.