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Structural development of Internet self‐regulation: Case study of the Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA)

Marcel Machill (Professor of general and special‐focus journalism with particular emphasis on international media systems at the University of Leipzig and heads the Media Policy department of the Bertelsmann Foundation, Gu¨tersloh, Germany.)
Thomas Hart (Director, Media Policy at the Bertelsmann Foundation, Gu¨tersloh, Germany.)
Bettina Kaltenhäuser (Postgraduate at the Institute of Journalism at the University of Mainz and project assistant for media policy at the Bertelsmann Foundation, Gu¨tersloh, Germany.)

info

ISSN: 1463-6697

Article publication date: 1 October 2002

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Abstract

Self‐regulation is widely considered to be a necessary complement – sometimes substitute – for traditional media‐supervision legislation and practice, especially so when the regulatory object is the Internet, where national legislation meets global networks and content. An example of an internationally structured self‐regulation initiative is provided by the Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA). Its filter for blocking Internet content must be seen within the context of a more extensive bundle of measures based on the principle of self‐regulation. By choosing ICRA as a focal point, the authors set out to illustrate the new, user‐centered paradigm that could become the rule rather than exception for all kinds of media.

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Citation

Machill, M., Hart, T. and Kaltenhäuser, B. (2002), "Structural development of Internet self‐regulation: Case study of the Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA)", info, Vol. 4 No. 5, pp. 39-55. https://doi.org/10.1108/14636690210453217

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited

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