Abstract

The work proposes to reflect on the constitution of the subjects of law to communication and communication citizenship from the emergence in Argentina of the Public Defender's Office of Audiovisual Communication Services. This organism is part of a public policy emanating from the Law on Audiovisual Communication Services (LSCA in Spanish) enacted in 2009. The interest is to reveal the way in which forms of subjects of right to communication are configured from a characterization of diverse relationships that the public can maintain with the media. The analysis warns that beyond what is formally established by the regulations, unique experiences appear that displace the limits with which the Argentine State has tried to define people as public. Among these forms, we will focus on what we call the public-communicator characterized as that which constitutes the individual as the full subject of the right to communication. For this we will investigate in a set of radio and television stations called by the LSCA as community, the political-cultural senses that support the bet for communicational citizenship.

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