Synopses & Reviews
The number of advertisements is steadily increasing around the world as affluence grows and more economies shift to a market system. One way to ensure that these ads are truthful, accurate, and wholesome is to rely on industry self-regulation. Through it, peers set up standards of good advertising practice and enforce them as an essential complement to government regulation. With the global expansion of advertising, the tasks of self-regulation have grown, together with some doubts regarding the industry's willingness and ability to develop and enforce ethical guidelines. This unique global study of the subject explores the spread of this social-control institution through a discussion of its relative strengths and weaknessess, a reporting of several surveys conducted by the author, and thirty-eight country profiles prepared with the assistance of practitioners around the world.
The first chapter defines self-regulation, analyzes its pros and cons, relates it to government regulation, investigates its structures and processes, discusses the involvement of non-industry members in its functioning, evaluates its effectiveness, and considers its recent spread around the world in the light of new developments such as the completion of the European Common Market. A second section reports the key findings of surveys conducted by the author for the International Advertising Association in 1986 and 1988-89. The last part offers profiles of advertising self-regulation as practiced in thirty-eight countries--including such leading nations as Canada, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. An appendix includes samples of key codes as well as various evaluations of the practice of advertising self-regulation around the world.
Review
This book will be useful primarily to two groups: 1) international advertisers and agencies that need a general overview of ASR as well as information and sources of further information on ASR in countries where they do business, and 2) educators who teach courses in international marketing and advertising, whose students need an introduction to, and sources of information on, ASR.JAMS
Synopsis
One way to ensure that ads are truthful, accurate, and wholesome is to rely on industry self-regulation. This book analyzes self-regulation and shows how advertisers around the world set up standards of good advertising practice and enforce them.
Synopsis
Millions of ads are issued every year here and abroad. A fraction of them are defective. One essential way to ensure that ads are truthful, accurate, and wholesome is to rely on industry self-regulation. Through self-regulation, peers set up standards of good advertising practice and enforce them. The relative advantages and shortcomings fo this social-control device are scrutinized, and its use around the world is analyzed in terms of membership, structure, standard-setting, complaint-handling (sometimes with the help of non-industry members), and relations with governments and consumer activists.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 18-20) and index.
Table of Contents
Foreword by Norman Vale
The Case for Advertising Self-Regulation
The Case for Advertising
What is Self-Regulation?
The Pros and Cons of Self-Regulation
The Current State of Self-Regulation
Why Self-Regulation Works
Outside Involvement in Advertising Self-Regulation
How Governments Work with Self-Regulation
Does Self-Regulation Do Enough?
International Advertising Self-Regulation
The IAA's Role in Promoting Advertising Self-Regulation
IAA Survey Findings
Highlights of the 1986 IAA Survey
Highlights of the 1988-89 IAA Survey
Country Profiles
Appendices
Index