Abstract
Based on a comparison of the contexts in which the regulatory structure of television broadcasting has been shaped and developed in Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea, this article explains the way in which each state, implicitly or explicitly, justifies the shape and development of its regulation of television broadcasting. It argues that despite the different perceptions and principles of television broadcasting held by each of the three countries, the context of regulatory structure and change in all three has been more influenced by political, rather than other factors, such as economic or technological changes.
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