The fundamental issues of imbalances in global communication had been discussed for some time. The American media scholar
Wilbur Schramm noted in 1964 that the flow of news among nations is thin, that much attention is given to
developed countries and little to
less-developing ones, that important events are ignored and reality is distorted. From a more radical perspective,
Herbert Schiller observed in 1969 that developing countries had little meaningful input into decisions about radio frequency allocations for
satellites at a key meeting in Geneva in 1962. Schiller pointed out that many satellites had military applications.
Intelsat which was set up for international co-operation in
satellite communication, was also dominated by the United States. In 1970, at the 16th
Congress of UNESCO, the need for a NWICO was clearly raised for the first time. In the 1970s these and other issues were taken up by the
Non-Aligned Movement and debated within the
United Nations and its agency responsible for communication, the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization (
UNESCO). In response to the
New International Economic Order (NIEO) of 1974, the expression "New International Information Order" (NIIO) was established to protest the disadvantages countries in the
global south faced in relation to information and communication. The Non-Aligned Movement alleged that
news agencies in the
Western world controlled 95 percent of worldwide information flows, namely
Associated Press (AP),
Agence France-Presse (AFP),
United Press International (UPI), and
Reuters. The term "new world information order" was coined by
Hedi Nouira, the prime minister of
Tunisia, who was the first to use it during a conference in 1974. From 1976 to 1978, the phrase New World Information and Communication Order was generally shortened to
New World Information Order or the
New International Information Order. In 1976, for the first time, the slogan of establishing a "New World Information and Communication Order" was clearly proposed. At the start of this discussion, NWICO got associated with the UNESCO starting from the early 1970s. Mass media concerns began with the meeting of non-aligned nations in
Algiers, 1973; again in
Tunis 1976, and later in 1976 at the
New Delhi Ministerial Conference of Non-Aligned Nations. The "new order" plan was textually formulated by Tunisia's Information Minister
Mustapha Masmoudi. Masmoudi submitted working paper No. 31 to the MacBride Commission. These proposals of 1978 were titled the 'Mass Media Declaration.' The MacBride Commission at the time was a 16-member body created by UNESCO to study communication issues. The UNESCO work on the NWICO was immediately met with criticism from many areas, mainly from Western countries. An interim report released in 1979 by UNESCO was targeted by the
American Newspaper Publishers Association and the
American Society of Newspaper Editors. While these organizations took issue with some of the early proposals including right of reply and press councils, they also were troubled by the phrase "New World Information and Communication Order", seeing it as a dog-whistle for the use of government propaganda in the guise of information flow balance. The criticism of UNESCO was sometimes overdrawn, as when
presstime (the journal of the American Newspapers Publishers Association) carried an article suggesting that a study on U.S.-UNESCO relations commissioned by UNESCO was "a cheap shot against the press" and that "it will add no luster to UNESCO's image," before the book even coming into existence. In 1980 the
MacBride Report was published. The report stated that the right to inform and be informed was critical to modern societies, and that information was a key resource. The report than proposed five main ideas of action to progress these goals • Include communication as a fundamental right. • Reduce imbalances in the news structure. • Strengthen a global strategy for communication while respecting cultural identities and individual rights. • Promote the creation of national communication policies to be coherent and lasting in the processes of development. • Explore how the NWICO could be used to benefit a
New International Economic Order (NIEO). Following the release of the report director-general
Amadou Mahtar M'Bow was reelected as the head of UNESCO, and those in favor of the NWICO movement found the report giving them strength. UNESCO received a thirty four percent increase in funding, and the United States agreed in principle to creating a new international body for communication in developing countries "within the framework of UNESCO". The report itself was controversial, as many viewed it as lending strength to the Communist and nonaligned blocs. M'Bow backed a compromise resolution that eliminated the more radical proposals of the report, however hard liners resisted these changes. Likewise, the United States warned that they would not provide funds or technical assistance if UNESCO appeared to desire government control of media. In December 1980 the United Nations formally endorsed the MacBride Report by saying that nations should "take into account" the report in framing of communications policy. The resolution also invited members to promote "the widespread circulation and study" of the report. While not a binding resolution, this move was met with immediate criticism from the British government, saying they did not regard the report as definitive. In 1983, the 22nd edition of UNESCO established the medium-term plan for the establishment of NWICO from 1985 to 1989. The struggle to establish a new world information order won broad support within the United Nations. Among those involved in the movement were the Latin American
Institute for the Study of Transnationals (ILET). One of its co-founders,
Juan Somavia was a member of the MacBride Commission. Another important voice was
Mustapha Masmoudi, the Information Minister for
Tunisia. In a Canadian radio program in 1983, Tom McPhail describes how the issues were pressed within UNESCO in the mid-1970s when the United States withheld funding to punish the organization for excluding Israel from a regional group of UNESCO. Some
OPEC countries and a few socialist countries made up the amount of money and were able to get senior positions within UNESCO. NWICO issues were then advanced at an important meeting in 1976 held in
Costa Rica. The only woman member of the commission was
Betty Zimmerman, representing Canada because of the illness of
Marshall McLuhan, who died in 1980. The movement was kept alive through the 1980s by meetings of the MacBride Round Table on Communication, even though by then the leadership of UNESCO distanced itself from its ideas. ==NWICO failure==