Clandestine Radio Broadcasting: A Study of Revolutionary and Counterrevolutionary Electronic CommunicationBloomsbury Academic, 1987 - 384 pages It is difficult to imagine a subject with more elusive data than this. The source and location of clandestine radio broadcasts are, by definition, secret. `White' stations openly identify themselves (such as Radio Free Europe), and `gray' stations are purportedly operated by dissident groups within a country, although actually they might be located in another nation; but `black' stations transmit broadcasts by one side disguised as broadcasts by another. . . . [This] is an extraordinary book. It belongs in every research library concerned with war and revolution and international communications. A valuable appendix lists known clandestine radio stateions, 1948-1985. Choice |
Contents
Two Decades of the Cold | 51 |
Clandestine Radio in the 1970s | 83 |
The 1980s | 111 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Clandestine Radio Broadcasting: A Study of Revolutionary and ... Lawrence C. Soley,John Spicer Nichols No preview available - 1987 |