Victor Pickard | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | Allegheny College University of Washington University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Occupation(s) | Professor, Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania |
Employer | University of Pennsylvania |
Victor Pickard is an American media studies scholar., professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. His the intersections of U.S. and global media activism and politics; the history and political economy of media institutions; and the normative foundations of media policy.
Background and Education
Pickard was born in Sewickley, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh. . He attended Quaker Valley High School and then Allegheny College after graduating from. After living abroad for nearly five years of teaching and traveling in parts of Asia, Europe, and Central/South America, Pickard returned to the U.S. to earn a master's degree in communications from the University of Washington and, in 2008, a Ph.D. at the Institute of Communications Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaignn.
Academic Career and Policy Work
Before teaching at Penn, Pickard was an assistant professor in the Media, Culture, and Communication Department at New York University. Pickard also designed and taught the inaugural Verklin media policy course at the University of Virginia. In Washington, D.C. he worked on media policy as a senior research fellow at the media reform organization Free Press and the public policy think tank the New America Foundation. Pickard was the first full-time researcher at New America's Open Technology Institute, where he continues to serve as a senior research fellow and advises their Media Policy Initiative and Wireless Future Project. While in D.C. he also served as a media policy fellow for Congresswoman Diane Watson and spent a summer conducting research as a Google Policy Fellow.
Pickard's research has received a number of grants and awards from national and international associations, including the National Communication Association, the International Communication Association, the Association of Internet Researchers, and the Yale Information Society Project's Access to Knowledge Conference. He received the Gerald R. Miller Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award for "Media Democracy Deferred: The Postwar Settlement for U.S. Communications, 1945-1949", which focuses on postwar media policy debates and reform efforts. This research forms the basis of his book on the history and future of news media (forthcoming with Cambridge University Press).
Scholarship
In 2009, Professor Pickard was the lead author of the first comprehensive report on the American journalism crisis, "Saving the News: Toward a National Journalism Strategy" (Published by Free Press). The widely cited report documented the roots of the crisis, potential alternative models, and policy recommendations for implementing structural reform in the American media system. The report was described as “the most intelligent and comprehensive proposed solution to the crisis in journalism"[1] and listed as one of “2009’s Most Influential Media About Media.”[2]
In 2011 Pickard co-edited the book Will the Last Reporter Please Turn out the Lights: The Collapse of Journalism and What Can Be Done To Fix It with Robert McChesney. The book provides a comprehensive analysis of the shifting news media landscape and maps the ongoing debates about journalism's uncertain future. Booklist called it “Bold, meditative, engrossing, this is an indispensable guide for followers of modern media.” A review in Library Journal described it as highlighting "journalism's role as a crucial component of democracy and an institution that needs to be reinvigorated ... anyone concerned about the state of journalism should read this book."[3]
Pickard's 2014 Book, America's Battle for Media Democracy, explores how the contemporary American media system came to be. The book explores why the United States has fewer public interest regulations compared with other democratic nations, how a handful of corporations came to control media, and why structural problems like market failures are routinely avoided in media policy discourse. Pickard draws from extensive archival research to uncover the American media system’s historical roots and normative foundations and charts the rise and fall of a forgotten media reform movement to recover alternatives and paths not taken. Furthermore, the book draws from lessons of the past to provide insight on policies for capturing the democratic potential of the Internet.
Publications
Books
- Victor Pickard (2014). America’s Battle for Media Democracy: The Triumph of Corporate Libertarianism and the Future of Media Reform. Cambridge University Press
- Robert McChesney & Victor Pickard, eds. (2011). Will the Last Reporter Please Turn out the Lights: The Collapse of Journalism and What Can Be Done To Fix It. New York: The New Press.
Reports
- Victor Pickard, Josh Stearns & Craig Aaron (2009). “Saving the News: Toward a National Journalism Strategy,” Free Press, Washington, D.C.
References
- ^ Pearson, Sarah Hinchliff. "How to Save Journalism". Retrieved 6 August 2012.
- ^ Bracken, John. "2009′s Most Influential Media About Media". Retrieved 6 August 2012.
- ^ "Will the Last Reporter Please Turn Out the Lights". Retrieved 6 August 2012.