Excerpt
Every day, the United States broadcasts news and entertainment programming in 59 languages to more than 100 countries around the world — although most Americans never see or hear it, as Federal law prohibits such transmission within the United States, and some foreign governments actively try to scramble the signals. It’s all part of the U.S. public diplomacy strategy — an attempt to bypass governments and provide foreign citizens with an unbiased view of American culture and uncensored information about their own country and the world.
The United States’ first international broadcasting effort …
In This Issue
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U.S. International Broadcasting
Public Diplomacy in the Twenty-First Century
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Broadcasting Board of Governors Overview
U.S. International Broadcasters
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Revisiting the Syria Accountability Act
Current Topic in Brief
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Maintaining and Improving the International Broadcasting Infrastructure
BBG's FY 2012 Budget Request
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International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy
U.S. and Foreign Efforts
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International Nuclear Safety Cooperation
Current Topic in Brief
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Pentagon Spending and Budget Constraints
Current Topic in Brief
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Pro & Con
Have U.S. Public Diplomacy Efforts Become Ineffective or Even Counterproductive?