Violence on television : Congressional inquiry, public criticism, and industry response : a policy analysis /
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | Cooper, Cynthia A. |
---|---|
Imprint: | Lanham, MD : University Press of America, c1996. |
Description: | ix, 201 p. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2572153 |
Table of Contents:
- Ch. 1. Broadcast Policy Making Research: Participants, Structures and Influences
- Ch. 2. Study of Congressional Hearings and Their Impact
- Ch. 3. Early Concerns Over Media Violence: Parents Protest Betty Boop and the Ether Bogeyman
- Ch. 4. Television - The Preparatory School for Juvenile Delinquency
- Ch. 5. Responding To Citizen Efforts To Clean Up the Vast Wasteland
- Ch. 6. The Kennedy Assassination and the Search For the Cause of Violence
- Ch. 7. The National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence
- Ch. 8. Senator and The Surgeon General: The Blind Leading the Blindfolded?
- Ch. 9. Report By The Scientific Advisory Committee on Television & Social Behavior
- Ch. 10. Attempts To Regulate Television Violence Through Section 315 and The Fairness Doctrine
- Ch. 11. In Search of A Causal Link Between Television and Behavior
- Ch. 12. Sex & Violence on Television: Parts I & II
- Ch. 13. Television Violence and the Courts: Don't Blame Me, TV Made Me Do It!
- Ch. 14. NBC and The Moral Majority: A Holy War Over Violence on Television
- Ch. 15. Removing the Shackles of Anticompetitive Regulation
- Ch. 16. "Happy Violence" and a Return to Concern Youth Violence
- Ch. 17. Janet Reno v. Beavis and Butthead
- Ch. 18. Congress Passes the Telecommunications Act of 1996
- Ch. 19. Summary Observations.