Robert McChesney

rwmcches@uiuc.edu
Research Professor of Communications
Research Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science
www.robertmcchesney.com
Primary areas of interest: political economy of communication; 20th century media history; international communication; media and communication policy; media and social change.
Robert W. McChesney is Research Professor in the Institute of Communications Research and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the Executive Director of the Illinois Fellowships in Media and Communication Policy Program. McChesney is the President and co-founder of Free Press, a national media reform organization --
www.freepress.net. McChesney also hosts the
Media Matters weekly radio program every Sunday afternoon on WILL-AM radio.. From 1988 to 1998 he was on the Journalism and Mass Communication faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. McChesney earned his Ph.D. in communications at the University of Washington in 1989. His work concentrates on the history and political economy of communication, emphasizing the role media play in democratic and capitalist societies. McChesney has written or edited eleven books, including The Problem of the Media: U.S. Communication Politics in the 21st Century, published in 2004 by Monthly Review Press; and, with Ben Scott, he has edited a book published by the New Press in 2004 titled: Our Unfree Press: 100 Years of Radical Media Criticism. McChesney's other books include the award-winning Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935 (Oxford University Press, 1993); Corporate Media and the Threat to Democracy (Seven Stories Press, 1997); with Edward S. Herman, The Global Media: The New Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism (Cassell, 1997); the multiple award-winning Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times (New Press, 2000); and, with John Nichols, Our Media, Not Theirs: The Democratic Struggle Against Corporate Media (Seven Stories Press, 2002). With John Bellamy Foster, McChesney is writing Media and Empire: The United States and Global Communication, to be published by New Press in 2006. McChesney has also written some 150 journal articles and book chapters and another 150 newspaper pieces, magazine articles and book reviews. His work has been translated into twelve languages. Since launching his academic career in the late 1980s, McChesney has made some 420 conference presentations and visiting guest lectures as well as more than 600 radio and television appearances. He has been the subject of more than 70 published profiles and interviews. In 2001 Adbusters magazine named him one of the Nine Pioneers of Mental Environmentalism. McChesney co-edits, with John Nerone, the History of Communication series for the University of Illinois Press, serves on the editorial boards of several journals, and is a research advisor to numerous academic and civic organizations. While teaching at Wisconsin, he was selected as one of the top 100 classroom teachers on the Madison campus. In addition to his academic work, McChesney serves on the Board of Directors for several nonprofit and noncommercial media organizations. From 2000 to 2004 he served as co-editor of Monthly Review www.monthlyreview.org -- the independent socialist magazine founded by Paul Sweezy and Leo Huberman in 1949. Prior to entering graduate school in 1983, McChesney was a sports stringer for UPI, published a weekly newspaper, and in 1979 was the founding publisher of The Rocket, a Seattle-based rock magazine. At the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in McChesney's hometown of Cleveland, the founding of The Rocket is credited as the birth of the Seattle rock scene of the late 1980s and 1990s.
Ph.D., Communications, University of Washington.