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This book analyzes the challenges facing public service media
management in the face of ongoing technological developments and
changing audience behaviors. It connects models, strategies,
concepts, and managerial theories with emerging approaches to
public media practices through an examination of media services
(e.g. blogs, social networks, search engines, content aggregators)
and the online performance of traditional public media
organizations. Contributors identify the most relevant and useful
approaches, those likely to encourage creativity, interaction, and
the development of innovative content and services, and discuss how
such innovation can underpin the continuation or expansion of
public service media in the changing mediascape.
This book is a collective effort of scholars who elaborate on
democracy, civil society and media-political relations in Central
and Eastern Europe. The authors look at both theories and practices
of media systems and democracy. They indicate problems, risks,
challenges related to political transformations, the public sphere,
journalism culture and media freedom. All of this while bearing in
mind the growing role of new media, civic engagement in the online
space as well as societal changes that Central and Eastern European
democracies are going through in the second decade of the 21st
Century. This book is a helpful companion to media and
communication scholars as well as students of journalism and
political science, media practitioners and policy makers in Central
and Eastern Europe and beyond. "A well-documented book on the mass
media in a little explored area: Central Eastern Europe. Four
models of media and politics are presented opening the floor for a
wider scholarly debate." (Paolo Mancini, Universita di Perugia,
Italy) "This volume meets the continuing need to make sense of the
changing worlds of journalism, journalists, and media. Each of the
ten contributions is a well conceptualized, researched and thought
out assessment of the pertinent issues and a springboard for
further evaluations and model building. A great addition to the
classroom and scholarship." (Peter Gross, The University of
Tennessee, USA)
This book analyzes the challenges facing public service media
management in the face of ongoing technological developments and
changing audience behaviors. It connects models, strategies,
concepts, and managerial theories with emerging approaches to
public media practices through an examination of media services
(e.g. blogs, social networks, search engines, content aggregators)
and the online performance of traditional public media
organizations. Contributors identify the most relevant and useful
approaches, those likely to encourage creativity, interaction, and
the development of innovative content and services, and discuss how
such innovation can underpin the continuation or expansion of
public service media in the changing mediascape.
Inspired by the recent achievements on comparing media systems and
research on models of media and politics in Western Europe and the
US, this title extends the findings to Central and Eastern Europe.
It addresses five major interrelated themes: concepts and history
of comparative media research - how ideological and normative
constructs gave way to systematic empirical work; the role of
foreign media groups in post-communist regions - the effects of
ownership in the context of economic and political pressures on
media organizations as well as in terms of impacts on media
freedom; political parallelism in mature and new democracies - the
various dimensions of the relationship between mass media and
political systems in a comparative perspective; professionalization
of journalism in different political cultures - autonomy of
journalists, professional norms and practices, political
instrumentalization and/or commercialization of the media etc; and,
the role of the state intervention in media systems, above all in
public service broadcasting.
This book analyses the adaptivity of public service media (PSM) to
the digital network age. The authors use specific case studies and
research initiatives, involving a variety of methodological and
theoretical approaches, to argue that current changes in media and
society offer a wide range of possibilities for PSM renewal.
Changes in PSM are analysed through the lenses of shifts in users'
behavior and the growing importance of big data, machine mediation
and developing partnership systems alongside other agents in the
overall media ecology. The authors map the potential mental,
regulatory, institutional and financial indicators which might
restrict the ways in which PSM adapts. They argue that PSM renewal
is possible as long as PSM policy-makers and managers both
recognize and understand the drivers for, and obstacles to, change.
"What is the role of Public Service Media in the digital era? While
pundits either call for its abolishment or fend off any criticism,
the present volume avoids simplistic answers and offers valuable
inputs for academic and policy debates." Manuel Puppis, University
of Fribourg, Switzerland. "This volume presents a multi-layered
analytical prism through the lenses of which conditions for public
service media future may be viewed. An excellent source for media
studies with country cases and general evaluation." Andrei Richter,
Office of the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Vienna,
Austria.
This collective effort of Central and Eastern European (CEE)
scholars investigates and compares journalism cultures in a
selection of CEE countries. Simultaneously with dramatic societal
and political changes, CEE journalisms undergo a technological
revolution and the global repercussions of the economic crisis.
According to the authors of this volume, the national cultural
factors and traditions play an important role in
professionalization and democratization of journalism cultures. The
book critically examines some of the identified developments, such
as shifting roles and functions of the media and journalists or
interpretations of occupational self-regulation as genuine
phenomena of CEE journalisms rather than deviations from the
Western professional ideology of journalism.
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