This paper distinguishes between laissez-faire and interventionist models used to justify and implement cultural diversity initiatives in the news media. The laissez-faire model is characteristic of U.S journalism. However, due to the convergence of media systems and the widespread adoption of diversity management, the laissez-fair model may also become the prevalent model throughout other Western democracies, in Europe and elsewhere. The paper argues that the problem with the laissez-fair approach to cultural diversity in the media is that it relies on commercial instead of normative justifications. As a result, cultural diversity is mostly reduced to ornament. Equated with accuracy and treated as a business asset, diversity serves, rather than challenges, the existing media system. By failing to open sufficient spaces for alternative social voices, business-driven media policies do not respond to the democratic needs of a multicultural society.

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hdl.handle.net/1765/23012
Javnost - The Public
Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (ESHCC)

Awad Cherit, I. (2008). Cultural Diversity in the News Media: A Democratic or a Commercial Need?. Javnost - The Public, 16(4), 55–72. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/23012