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0.5.2. Recommendation 1067 on the cultural dimension of
broadcasting in Europe, of 1987
http://stars.coe.fr/
“RECOMMENDATION 1067 (1987) on the cultural dimension of broadcasting
in Europe
The Assembly, Having considered the report by its Committee on Culture
and Education (Doc. 5782) and the opinion of its Legal Affairs Committee
(Doc. 5800) ;
Recalling its Recommendation 926 (1981) on questions raised by cable television
and by direct satellite broadcasts, and Recommendation 996 (1984) on Council
of Europe work relating to the media ;
Recalling the Declaration on the Freedom of Expression and Information
adopted by the Committee of Ministers in 1982 ;
Drawing attention to the profound changes in the mass media field, and
in particular in that of television, as a result of the introduction of
new transmission techniques by satellite and cable, in conjunction with
rapidly increasing commercialisation both in public broadcasting and through
privatisation ;
Noting that such developments may have potentially positive effects, in
particular through :
increasing the opportunities and opening up new fields for cultural creation
and expression ;
broadening the range of programmes ;
assisting awareness of other European languages and cultures ;
Believing however that such changes also carry serious cultural risks,
notably :
the encouragement of passive consumption of broadcast material ;
the reduction in programme diversity and the erosion of socially accepted
standards of behaviour ;
the undermining of the cultural identity of smaller countries and minor
language groups, and of the cultural diversity of Europe as a whole ;
lack of respect for copyright and neighbouring rights ;
economic and thereby cultural dependence on outside (largely commercial)
factors ;
Recognising that advertising provides an important occasion for artistic
creation and is often of high quality, but at the same time wishing to
prevent advertising destroying, for example by inappropriate juxtaposition
or interruption, the cultural value of the programme it accompanies ;
Insisting on the need for an effective reassertion by governments of the
public service nature of broadcasting (whether public or private), and
of the political, educational and cultural roles of the mass media, and
believing that greater emphasis should be placed on the mass media as
a means of creative expression, cultural diversity and communication throughout
Europe ;
Believing that, as a general principle, both public and private broadcasting
should be subject to the same rules ;
Stressing the importance for member states to concert policies and, when
relevant, harmonise legal arrangements relating to the mass media, but
in a manner that will respect national differences and also the independence
of professional broadcasting bodies ;
Repeating its concern, expressed in Recommendation 963 (1983) on cultural
and educational means of reducing violence, that artistic freedom should
not be used as an alibi for purely commercial interests ;
Recalling its Recommendation 862 (1979) on cinema and the state, and stressing
the need for closer co-ordination of mass media policies with those of
other means of cultural expression ;
Recalling also its Recommendation 928 (1981) on the educational and cultural
problems of minority languages and dialects in Europe, and Recommendation
1043 (1986) on Europe's linguistic and literary heritage, and stressing
the role that the cinema and mass media can play in promoting linguistic
diversity and widening cultural appreciation ;
Recalling its Recommendation 1018 (1985) on private sponsorship of the
arts, and Recommendation 1059 (1987) on the economics of culture, and
believing that considerably more resources should be channelled from the
enormous profits made in the mass media business into direct encouragement
of original production and the development of new and more varied talent
;
Believing also that the governments of member states should review the
fiscal incentives available to promote the re-investment of profits made
in the mass media business in original domestic production and the development
of new and more varied talent ;
Recalling the long-standing concern of the Council for Cultural Co-operation
and the Conference of European Ministers responsible for Cultural Affairs
with the interaction between cultural policy and the communication media,
and welcoming the proposal made by the ministers in Sintra (September
1987) for developing practical measures to promote European cultural diversity,
taking into account the development of the communication technologies
;
Having noted the texts adopted by the 1st European Ministerial Conference
on Mass Media Policy (Vienna, December 1986), and welcoming in particular
the direct request addressed by the Vienna conference to the Committee
of Ministers for the rapid preparation, within the Council of Europe framework,
of binding legal instruments on certain crucial aspects of transfrontier
broadcasting ;
Stressing the need for the participation of the European Community bodies
in this initiative ;
Underlining the need for speed in this area, in order to keep pace with
technological advance and avoid cultural policies being dictated by such
advances,
Recommends that the Committee of Ministers :
finalise and open for signature, early in 1988, a binding legal instrument
on basic standards for transfrontier broadcasting by both public and private
bodies, with a view to the possibility of its entering into force before
the 2nd European Ministerial Conference on Mass Media Policy in Stockholm
in November 1988, and set up an effective mechanism (including the representation
of broadcasting bodies) to monitor the implementation of this instrument
;
provide for the subsequent inclusion into such an instrument of binding
agreements or additional protocols in other fields mentioned in the following
paragraphs ;
adopt a declaration on public responsibility for the mass media and the
public service nature of broadcasting, with particular reference to the
role of television in stimulating awareness of different cultures and
developing the diversity of cultural and linguistic identities ;
draw up proposals for maintaining and encouraging the linguistic diversity
of the mass media, for example by :
joint production funds on which minor language nations may also draw ;
the inclusion of minor language interviews in news bulletins ;
the development of improved techniques for subtitling and the provision
of dubbing on an optional basis ;
ensuring the right for national languages, and where appropriate minor
local and regional languages, to be carried on national, regional and
local networks ;
recognise advertising as a valid field of creative expression, but give
consideration to means of ensuring that it does not shock or affect the
cultural integrity of the programmes it may accompany ;
accelerate and intensify its work on guidelines for reducing violence,
brutality and pornography, with reference to national legislation, not
only on videograms, but also with reference to broadcasting in general
;
encourage increased participation by women in broadcasting (especially
in the fields of production and programming) ;
encourage media education, for example by :
the introduction of school courses on critical appreciation of the media
and audiovisual production ;
the information of adults (and not only parents) as to developments in
the mass media field ;
promote the use of the mass media in education and in particular in line
with the objectives of the Council of Europe in such fields as human rights,
tolerance and equality between the sexes ;
encourage the development of international concertation to promote the
production and distribution of audiovisual works in Europe within the
framework of overall cultural policies, including :
training programmes, for example the setting up of training centres for
those working inthe broadcasting profession, and trainee exchange schemes
;
protection of copyright and neighbouring rights ;
the closer co-ordination of media policies, and in particular the relationship
between cinema and television ;
mechanisms of direct and indirect support for audiovisual creativity ;
special emphasis on co-production in the making of musical and other non-verbal
programmes ;
maintain and encourage a continuing dialogue between all partners (government,
media, the public and interested non-governmental bodies) with a view
to developing, by means of a series of suitable instruments, the basis
for the free exchange of mass media material and professional experience
between Council of Europe member countries, between Western and Eastern
Europe, and between Europe and other parts of the world ;
conduct periodic reviews of international co-operation and research relating
to broadcasting.
[1] Assembly debate on 8 October 1987 (18th Sitting) (see Doc. 5782, report
of the Committee on Culture and Education, and Doc. 5800, opinion of the
Legal Affairs Committee).
Text adopted by the Assembly on 8 October 1987 (18th Sitting).”
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