As a seminal study on the topic of media system comparison, Hallin and Mancini’s 2004 book has been discussed so extensively that in 2012, they published a new book presenting a collection of criticism.
Comparing Media Systems Beyond the Western World addresses the main issues and concerns that authors have expressed between 2004 and 2012, with special regards to the framework's extension to non-Western systems. Criticism on the concept of political parallelism in particular relates to the fact that the scope of Hallin and Mancini’s concept is only applicable to countries with different
political parties or groups. In her 2012 paper
How Far Can Media Systems Travel? Applying Hallin and Mancini’s Comparative Framework outside the Western World, Katrin Voltmer discussed and criticised Hallin and Mancini’s work with special regards to methodology and its inapplicability to non-Western countries. She also addresses the issue of political parallelism. In non-Western media systems, politics are not shaped by ideological distinctions between left and right. Political conflict is created by antagonising
religious,
ethnical, or regional identities.
Polarization between these factors in the
political systems of non-Western states, according to Voltmer, leads to conflicts whose structures are different from the right-left distinction of European history. To adapt the concept of political parallelism to non-Western states, she suggests splitting it into three more narrow categories matching three different political situations: • "Polarized pluralism" denotes antagonism between two opposing camps or political, ethnic, regional or religious identities (for example the conflict between Protestants and Catholics in
Northern Ireland). • "Fragmented Pluralism" denotes that political contest is fragmented into many smaller groups of similar dominance (as was the case, for example, in
Yugoslav federalism). • "Hegemonic Pluralism" denotes that one camp or party continuously dominates the conflict (for example, the
African National Congress (ANC) in
South Africa). These three categories do have differing dynamics for the political process, and thus, the media system. Yuezhi Zhao, another contributor to
Comparing Media Systems Beyond the Western World, proposed a different measure to adapt political parallelism to non-Western media systems, in this case to China. In her article
Understanding China’s Media System in a World Historical Context, she states that the concept is difficult to apply because of China’s
one-party-predominance, which differentiates it from
multi-party democracies with political pluralism. In China’s case, the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) does own shares of the
news media, and most of the press is affiliated with the party structurally, so that China’s media system can be described as a "media as mouthpiece" system with
party-press parallelism. Afonso de Albuquerque proposes to assess political parallelism in media systems very differently. Applying Hallin and Mancini’s framework to the media system in
Brazil, which did not undergo
commercialization processes in the 19th and 20th century, but only relatively late, he proposes a new role for the media in his article
On Models and Margins – Comparative Media Models Viewed from a Brazilian Perspective. As a political agent, he argues, there are four types of media-politics relationships: • "Polarized Pluralist", in which party lines are clear, and the media politically active (comparable to Hallin and Mancini’s Polarized Pluralist media system) • "Media as Political Agent", with a moderating role, in which party lines are relatively unclear, but the media politically active (as is the case in Brazil) • "Public Service Media", where party lines are clear but the media relatively passive in political reporting (comparable to Hallin& Mancini’s Democratic Corporatist media system) • "Objective Media", which is politically passive and transports unclear party lines. In Brazil, argues de Albuquerque, the media acts as apolitical agent partaking in the political debate, but not as an advocate of political parties. == Adaptations ==