- Monroe Price
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Monroe E. Price is Director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Global Communication Studies (CGCS) at the Annenberg School for Communication and Director of the Stanhope Centre for Communications Policy Research in London. Professor Price is the Joseph and Sadie Danciger Professor of Law and Director of the Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society at the Cardozo School of Law, where he served as Dean from 1982 to 1991. Professor Price was founding director of the Program in Comparative Media Law and Policy at Wolfson College, Oxford, and a Member of the School of Social Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He was deputy director of California Indian Legal Services, one of the founders of the Native American Rights Fund, and author of Law and the American Indian. Among his many books are Media and Sovereignty (MIT Press, 2002), Television, The Public Sphere and National Identity (Oxford University Press, 1996), and “Owning the Olympics: Narratives of the New China” (University of Michigan Press, 2008, edited with Daniel Dayan).
Monroe Price developed the 'Market for Loyalties' theory during his tenure at Cardoza law in the 1990s. This theory examines media regulation in terms of a market with an exchange, not of cash for goods or services, but identity for loyalty.
References
Categories:- Living people
- American academics
- University of Pennsylvania faculty
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