1. Television Formats in the World / The World of Television Formats Albert Moran2. Asia: New Growth Areas Michael Keane3. Feeling Glocal: Japan in the Global Television Format Business Koichi Iwabuchi4. A Local Mode of Programme Adaptation: South Korea in the Global Television Format Business Dong-Hoo Lee5. Cloning, Adaptation, Import and Originality: Taiwan in the Global Television Format Business Yu-Li Liu and Yi-Hsiang Chen6. Coping, Cloning and Copying: Hong Kong in the Global Television Format Business Anthony Fung7. A Revolution in Television and a Great Leap Forward for Innovation? China in the Global Television Format Business Michael Keane8. Let the Contests Begin!: Singapore in the Global Television Format Business Tania Lim9. Copied from Without and Cloned from Within: India in the Global Television Format Business Amos Owen Thomas and Keval J. Kumar10. Closing the Creativity Gap: Renting Intellectual Capital in the Name of Local Content: Indonesia in the Global Television Format Business Philip Kitley11. Reformatting the Format: the Philippines in the Global Television Format Business Josefina M.C. Santos12. Distinctly European? Australia in the Global Television Format Business Albert Moran13. An Import / Export Industry: New Zealand in the Global Television Format Business Geoff Lealand14. Joining the Circle Albert Moran and Michael Keane
Albert Moran is Senior Lecturer at Griffith University, Australia. He has written extensively on the Australian screen and on international aspects of film and television. Recent books include Film Policy: International, National and Regional Perspectives and Copycat TV: Globalisation, Program Formats and Cultural Identity. His current research includes a reinterpretation of Australian TV's development, a handbook on business/legal aspects of formats and a study of global flows of fiction formats.
Michael Keane is Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Creative Industries Research and Application Centre at the Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Current research interests include television format trade in Asia and creative industries internationalisation in East Asia. He is co-editor of Media in China: Consumption, Content and Crisis (with Stephanie H. Donald and Yin Hong).