Commonwealth Studies At London University launched A Website On Sri Lanka’s Media Policy And Law
The work has generated two core papers on Media Freedom and Social Responsibility in Sri Lanka: A Review of the Legal, Institutional and Educational Framework Relating to the Print Media (co-authored by Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena & Gehan Gunetilleke) and on the Political Economy of the Electronic Media (co-authored by the late Tilak Jayaratneand Sarath Kellapotha). The research product encompasses a comprehensive analysis of media reform in reference to the print and electronic media, supported by key interviews with editors, journalists, teachers and administrators involved in Sri Lanka’s educational and self regulatory bodies in regard to the media. Senior lecturer in mass communications at the University of Kelaniya, Wijeyanandana Rupesinghe was of invaluable assistance in facilitating the work with university media teachers.
The Initiative has also commissioned new writing on Media, Policy and Law in Sri Lanka from a number of acknowledged experts and practitioners, including senior editor Sinha Ratnatunga, senior journalists Amal Jayasinghe, Ameen Izzadeen and Namini Wijedasa, academic Professor Sasanka Perera, Dr Jayantha de Almeida Guneratne, President’s Counsel, and web journalist and blogger Nalaka Gunawardene. These writings will be published later in an edited publication.
The Sinhala translation of the two core papers will be available shortly at leading bookshops in the country.
The Initiative seeks to promote Media Reform as a curriculum subject in educational institutions and to build up expertise in the subject both academically and among other key stakeholder groups. In an age of increasing globalisation and convergence, it aims to inform civil society of the importance of issues of media policy and law for freedom of expression and the safeguarding of the public interest. It also aims to widen the constituency which understands the changing international and technological context of the media in the early twenty first century.
The website also offers an archive of research material – exegesis and analysis – generated by the research team and structured in a way that will give added value to post graduate students and faculty staff working in the field, and provide an accessible resource for civil society organisations and professionals in Sri Lanka, and other parts of South Asia.