Results of searching entries for keyword: Communist Party
(Liberal) mass media and the (multi)party system in post-communist Lithuania
Irmina Matonytė
(European Humanities University in Vilnius, Lithuania)Spies like us: Media politics and the communist past in Bulgaria
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)Old and new constraints in foreign news coverage in post-communist Ukraine
Natalya Ryabinska
(Ukrainian Catholic Universiyty in Lviv, Ukraine)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Corporate social responsibility developments in post-communist countries: Towards organisations’ social legitimacy
Kaja Tampere
TALLINN UNIVERSITY, ESTONIABOOK REVIEW: Węglińska Agnieszka (2021) Public Television in Poland. Political Pressure and Public Service Media in a Post- communist Country pp. 135.
Maria Wąsicka-Sroczyńska
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, PolandVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
Patronage Media in Post-Communist Mongolia
Undrah Baasanjav
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, USA Poul Eric Nielsen
University of Aarhus, Denmark Munkhmandakh Myagmar
Press Institute of Mongolia, MongoliaComparing media systems in new democracies: East meets South meets West
Katrin Voltmer
(University of Leeds, Great Britain)Polish discourses concerning the Spanish Civil War. Analysis of the Polish press 1936–2015
Wojciech Opioła
(University of Opole, Poland)
Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Variations in media freedom: Why do some governments in Central and Eastern Europe respect media freedom more than other ones?
Péter Bajomi-Lázár
(Budapest Business School, Hungary)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Bias partisanship journalistic norms and ethical problems in the contemporary Hungarian political media
Balázs Sipos
(Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary)Red danger before elections: Trick or threat?
Jan Křeček and Lenka Vochocová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Volume 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
Climate Change in Chinese Newspapers 2000–2020: Discursive Strategies of Consolidating Hegemony
Mengrong Zhang
University of CologneVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
METHODS & CONCEPTS: Media Capture Theory: A Paradigm Shift?
Péter Bajomi-Lázár
Budapest Business University, HungaryVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Famous women yearn for Putin and other unlikely tales: Glamorizing right-wing populist actors in the Bulgarian editions of Cosmopolitan and Elle
Miglena Sternadori
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY, USAEditor’s introduction: Development of agenda-setting theory and research. Between West and East
Wayne Wanta (Oklahoma State University, USA),
Bartłomiej Łódzki (University of Lower Silesia, Poland)“Original democracy”: A rhetorical analysis of Romanian post-revolutionary political discourse and the University Square protests of June 1990
Ioana Literat
(University of Southern California, USA)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
What does the murder of a journalist and follow-up events tell us about freedom of the press and politics in a European country?
Andrej Školkay
SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION AND MEDIA , SLOVAKIAVolume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Journalists PR professionals and the practice of paid news in Central and Eastern Europe: An overview
Henrik Örnebring
(Karlstad University, Sweden)Transition from communism to democracy in Romanian advertising
Madalina Moraru
(University of Bucharest, Romania)Mission (im)possible. The case of Lithuanian Public Service Broadcasting
Žygintas Pečiulis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Media populism in Macedonia: Right-wing populist style in the coverage of the “migrant crisis”
Ivo Bosilkov
UNIVERSITY OF MILAN , ITALY
UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM , NETHERLANDSPublic Service Broadcasting in Latvia: Old images new user needs and market pressure
Inta Brikše
(University of Latvia in Riga, Latvia)The scope and limit for the development of corporate social responsibility in the Baltic States as a strategy of corporate communication
Kaja Tampere
(Tallinn University, Estonia)