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Studies & Reports 29 of 46
"This paper makes the case for maintaining Canadian media ownership. It is based on a belief that public policy on culture and heritage in Canada must ensure that the widest diversity of Canadian voices are heard and that policy is not merely oriented to the market and ensuring that "the stars" are heard. While we celebrate the domestic and international successes of our leading actors, comedians, novelists, poets, rock, pop and jazz stars, we also believe that a successful cultural policy ensures that Aboriginal, French and English and multicultural voices from all regions are heard and that the experiences of men, women and children, whether born here or having chosen to live here, are also accessible. The paper goes on to criticize the arguments put forward in support of eliminating or weakening the rules. It also examines some of the flaws in our system, where the intent of public policy has not been well translated into policy instruments or where governments and their agencies have not ade-quately enforced their own policies."
Posted Document
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ForeignOwnReportEN.pdf 1.09 MB
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Creator(s)
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Canadian Conference of the Arts
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Source Location
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Canada
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Publisher
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Canadian Conference of the Arts
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Date Published
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2004-01-14
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Language
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Bilingual
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Copyright Holder
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Canadian Conference of the Arts
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