EXPLORING THE ROLE OF MASS MEDIA IN DEMOCRACY AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT

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Scholarly Research Journal for Interdisciplinary Studies, Online ISSN 2278-8808, SJIF 2018 = 6.371, www.srjis.com PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL, MAR-APR, 2019, VOL- 6/50 EXPLORING THE ROLE OF MASS MEDIA IN DEMOCRACY AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT Dipty Subba, Ph. D. Asst. Prof. Head, Deptt of Education, Southfield College, Darjeeling, dsubba122@gmail.com Abstract This article seeks to compile an understanding of the role of media in sustaining democracy and national development. The media place the public agenda and act as the caretaker of public issues. The need to belong to a common national life has changed with the inception of modernization and democratization processes. The media is also said to be an aggregation of all communication channels that use techniques of making a lot of direct personal communication between the communicator and the public. The mass media constitute the backbone of democracy. Many multicultural and multiethnic countries have adopted democratic values, institutions and processes to hold their societies together. Media are particularly important in facilitating nation-building, especially of post-colonial societies and those experiencing ethnic and religious diversities. The real influence of the media in national development depends on the media themselves, the societies in which they function, and the audience they accomplish. Keywords: Media, Democracy and National Development

Scholarly Research Journal's is licensed Based on a work at www.srjis.com 1. Introduction: The media, with specific reference to the combined entity of newspapers, radio, television and the Internet, play a very vital role in national development. The media place the public agenda and act as the caretaker of public issues. They play a crucial role in the function and change of any society. For the last half-century, television has been the crucial tool for getting the masses. Still today, the majority of the world gets its information from the television. The issue of whether a free press is the best communications solution in a democracy is much too important at the close of this century and needs to be examined dispassionately. The works of Lerner (1958), Schramm (1964), McClelland (1961), Pye (1963) and Rogers (1969) have molded the early theory and practice of utilizing mass media for national development. These scholars, with their dictum of modernization, believed that mass media are powerful agents of change. Numerous observers have emphasized that a free press is valuable for democracy, for good governance, and for human development. Amartya Sen in his famous argument states that in independent and democratic countries, the free press Copyright Š 2017, Scholarly Research Journal for Interdisciplinary Studies


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