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Parliamentary
Assembly Assemblée parlementaire |
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RECOMMENDATION 748 (1975)[1]
on the role and management of national broadcasting
The Assembly,
1. Considering the work of the Munich Symposium on the role and
management of telecommunications in a democratic society (24-26 June
1974) ;
2. Having noted the report of its Committee on Culture and Education on
this subject (Doc. 3520) ;
3. Aware of the present debates in many European countries on the
management of broadcasting, and convinced that such management must preserve
but can also enhance the democratic nature of European society ;
4. Recalling the Symposium in Florence in 1973 on freedom of expression
and the role of the artist in European society, and in particular its
Recommendation 719 (1973) on the exercise of freedom of artistic
expression ;
5. Convinced, however, that, together with such freedom, individuals
should be responsible for what they might broadcast, and also accountable
before the laws and existing standards of their countries ;
6. Recalling the Symposium in Salzburg in 1968 on human rights and mass
communications, and its Resolution 428 (1970) and Recommendation 582 (1970)
(with Doc. 2687), and welcoming Resolution (74) 26 of the Committee of
Ministers which affirmed the right of reply by individuals to radio and
television ;
7. Regarding it as the duty of governments to ensure that the
broadcasting media provide a full public service in the fields of 1.
information, 2. culture and education, 3. debate and 4. artistic
expression ;
8. Believing that this service applies to the society of a country as a
whole as well as to its minorities ;
9. Holding that the state is only the trustee of the public interest,
and that the interpretation of such interest must be flexible and be debated by
the public itself rather than particular groups (however well intentioned),
with some measure of institutionalised public control over what is
broadcast ;
10. Aware of the extensive and increasing penetration of society by the
broadcasting media ;
11. Stressing the importance of educating the public in the use of
these media ;
12. Recalling the work being done by its parliamentary Committee on
Science and Technology on the democratic control of technological development,
in particular in its recent symposium on science and the decision-making
machinery of society ;
13. Believing that there is room for considerably greater co-operation
on a European level in broadcasting, both for the profitable exchange of ideas
and expression and as a direct means of improving mutual understanding between
European peoples ;
14. Aware of the difficulty of financing broadcasting networks and
concerned to ensure that there be no commercial motivation in programming
(planning or content),
15. Recommends that the Committee of Ministers :
a. consider the "draft minimum requirements for national
broadcasting" set out in the annex to this recommendation ;
b. invite member governments to consider holding an ad hoc
conference of Ministers responsible for culture and education together with
those responsible for telecommunications, in order to consider means of
concerting a common European policy as regards the cultural and educational
potential of broadcasting.
ANNEX
Draft minimum requirements for national broadcasting
a. A full service for all the public, with :
i. Multiple choice of programming with due recognition of regional
and minority interests, although not exclusively on any single
channel ;
ii. A high educational and cultural element ;
iii. Control, by properly balanced programming, of cultural,
commercial and also information-pollution ;
iv. High content of co-ordination and exchange with other European
broadcasting productions ;
b. Freedom of expression, with no governmental or institutional
preliminary censorship, but subject to the following qualifications :
i. The right of reply ;
ii. Public accountability of producers for their productions before
some organisation, in the first instance predominantly parliamentary,
democratically representative of society ;
iii. Accountability of producers, rather than institutions, before
the laws in force in any particular state ;
c. The right of individual access to broadcasting in principle,
though subject to the existing controls on quality and to the availability of
relevant space ;
d. Recognition of viewers' and listeners' associations and
proper opportunities for their opinions to be publicly debated ;
e. Instruction at all levels of education, and also via the
media themselves, in the understanding of broadcasting (including advertising
techniques and political propaganda) ;
f. Research into both the technological and social aspects of
broadcasting ;
g. Flexibility to introduce new techniques (such as
viewer-selected superimposed subtitling) ;
h. A special employment policy for those engaged in the media
that recognises their particular responsibility towards ensuring a public
service and the obligations this responsibility imposes upon them ;
i. The divorce of commercial interest from programme content and
planning ;
j. Responsible control of broadcasting, whether directly by
government or by the intermediary of licensed institutions.
[1]. Assembly debate on 23 January 1975 (18th
Sitting) (see Doc. 3520, report of the Committee on Culture and Education).
Text adopted by the Assembly on 23 January 1975 (19th
Sitting).
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