Role Of Media in National Development Through the 21st Century

The importance of media as institutional pillars of society and State is unmatched by any other pillar. Consequently, the independence of media needs to be made so secure and authentic that independent media became as sustainable as an independent judiciary.

The factors that will impact upon national development through the 21st century include geo-political, economic, technological, social and cultural conditions of rapid change. Before we speculate the future role of media let us recall the role of media in previous times. It was in the 20th century that modern mass media acquired a pervasive political presence. Media played a significant role in national development across the world.

After World War-II, the levels of economic development and institutional stability divided nations and states into the First World, e.g. the USA and Canada into the Second World, e.g. major communist and socialist states and the Third World, e.g. Kenya, Pakistan, Bolivia. Media have rendered roles in the development of nations that can be placed in the following modes:

  1. As articulators of national identity, promoting campaigns for independence from colonialism or, where nations were already free, as reinforcers of recognised national identities.
  2. As representatives of majorities, and of minorities within nations.
  3. As motivators for national cohesion and unity, and doing so not necessarily only when owned by the state or controlled by governments but as expressions of their own beliefs and policies.
  4. As sources for valuable information about development, as in providing guidance and advice to farmers via radio and TV on the use of seeds and fertilizers in support of agricultural extension workers, who first helped promote the concept of development communication.
  5. As advocates of the free market and of consumerism, disseminating volumes of advertising content, serving as extensions for the marketing of goods and services.
  6. As means of expression for the marginalised, the dispossessed, the persecuted.
  7. As the public’s own, de facto, ombudsmen regarding people’s complaints and grievances.
  8. As independent, first-hand reporters on the actual situation in zones of war and violence.
  9. As popularisers of the arts, literature, music and creative cultural work.
  10. As mirrors of reality in respect of the basic functions of media, i.e. for information, education and entertainment.
Despite low literacy at that time the print media exercised an influence on the policy process and on public opinion. Newspapers and magazines became the instant history books of the new nation. They were eagerly awaited, respectfully read and extensively quoted. Radio Pakistan and cinemas documentaries (shown compulsorily), played vital role in national development. The role of media during 1965 Pak-India war was remarkable and memorable. Radio Pakistan kept millions spellbound with its news bulletins and war songs to boost the morale of the people. The people of Pakistan supported the army and gave them courage and confidence to fight with enemy forces.In 1971 war the PTV which was under control of military dictator could not make any impact. The Radio Pakistan was also under state monopoly subject to official control of content.

Media have an intrinsic bias for urban centres. Most media practitioners live and operate from them. Advertising, the life-blood of commercial media, also originates from the cities because all the decisions regarding placement of advertising in media are taken there.
 
With the assumption of power by General Pervez Musharraf in October 1999, media in Pakistan entered a distinct new phase of rapid change and notable ironies. Between 1999 and 2006, Pakistan has quite clearly become a country where the media, amongst the 57 member-States of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, enjoys the highest level of freedom of expression despite a military General being first the Head of Government (1999-2001), and since then the Head of State. This is so, notwithstanding the continuance in place of some laws and some aspects of policy that do inhibit the media. But in overall terms, it can be stated with confidence that the media in this period have helped the Pakistani nation to acquire a new level of awareness and to express pluralism in public discourse unknown in all previous decades of history. In doing so, they have also helped promote a sense of pride in being Pakistani and in fostering a new ethos of a post-1971 nationalism which can perhaps best described as Pakistaniat, a term that evokes the sharing of an exclusive national identity.Nations in the 21st century, particularly in Asia, will face the challenge of dealing with new parallel frontiers and multiple frontiers. Their national entities will of course remain within the territorial frontiers in which each State exists.

Seen in conjunction with the already abundant presence of media, such political and economic change will create entire areas of globalism that will be placed within the framework of singular nationalisms. News media will be expected to function as ‘early warning’ sentinels that alert citizens at large and the leadership of civil and political society to the critical trends already emerging within nations as also likely to develop in the future. Whether news media can fulfil such expectation depends on the innovations and versatility they develop in their professional capacity. They will need to add new capabilities that go far beyond event-centred reportage and stenographic reporting to creative and conceptual levels untrapped in the conventional mindset of daily journalism.

Perhaps this century will also witness reconciliation between a basic contradiction that prevails between States, societies and media. This is with regard to the curious anomaly to be found whereby there is virtually no sharing of media content on a daily basis between the civil societies of States which, on the official level, enjoy historical and contemporary relationships of deep friendship. For instance, the media of China, Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia have no inter-action on a popular level with the people of Pakistan. There are various reasons for this anomaly such as linguistic differences. But the anomaly becomes an amusing paradox when it is noted that, in contrast to this lack of day-to-day contact between the people and media of countries with which Pakistan has excellent relations, the media of India have an extensive and intrusive presence in every Pakistani town and city, and in many villages as well. The irony is made the more stark by the hostility and outright conflict which have marked Pakistan-India relations for almost six decades. Here too there are explanatory reasons. But the contrast between one set of States, societies, and media, and the contrast with the Pakistan-India equation, remains an area worth venturing into for the purposes of rationalisation and reconciliation in the decades ahead.

Several highly combustive conditions are likely to characterise the 21st century. With world population set to increase from about 6.2 billion to about 9.2 billion by the middle of the 21st century, certain countries, and their cities in particular, are going to become giant concentrations of humanity living in conditions of congestion, pollution, competition for scarce resources and space for assertion of respective identities which can only but lead to life lived as if on a razor’s edge.

Terrorism thrives on news media’s addiction to the sensational and the destructive. Terrorism damages nations and State structures by fomenting insecurity and uncertainty.
 
Media have an intrinsic bias for urban centres. Most media practitioners live and operate from them. Advertising, the life-blood of commercial media, also originates from the cities because all the decisions regarding placement of advertising in media are taken there. Governmental centres and other focal points of policy-making and opinion-making are also urban-based.In the 21st century, several urban centres of Asian nations are going to attain the size and scale of mega-cities.

Terrorism thrives on news media’s addiction to the sensational and the destructive. Terrorism damages nations and State structures by fomenting insecurity and uncertainty, by undermining the ability and credibility of State institutions to effectively protect the lives and property of citizens. Some media seem to revel in repeatedly showing the terrible outcome of violence. This gives to the work of terrorists just the very exposure they cherish ‘but such coverage also drives people and nations into gloom and despair. Do media in the 21st century need to review the instant, high-pitched sustained coverage given to brutalities and to terrorism committed by States and by non-State actors, without reducing the scale of the tragedies, and without diverting attention from the implications of such acts?

The 21st century will be as much an era of building State structures and systems as it will be a period of building and boosting nations to their optional potential.

To conclude: media in the 21st century will have a full and daunting agenda. How to facilitate the building of better systems of democratic governance in rural and urban areas. How to help make nations cohesive and how to make states more respectful of individual citizens and of human beings even as media and their audiences move onwards into uncharted times of fascinating complexity.

The importance of media as institutional pillars of society and State is unmatched by any other pillar. Consequently, the independence of media needs to be made so secure and authentic that independent media became as sustainable as an independent judiciary.

By: Qayyum Nizami

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.