Results of searching entries for keyword: change
Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
BOOK REVIEW: Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska Gunnar Nygren (eds.). (2015). Journalism in Change. Journalistic Culture in Poland Russia and Sweden...
Henrik Örnebring
(Karlstad University, Sweden)Public radio and the problem of demographic change. The presenters’ perspective on senior citizens’ well-being factors in Polish Radio programmes.
Grażyna Stachyra
UNIVERSITY OF MARIA CURIE- SKŁODOWSKA IN LUBLIN, POLANDPolitical campaign communication in Sweden: Change but not too much
Lars Nord
(Mid Sweden University in Sundsvall, Sweden)Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Ready to Hire a Freelance Journalist: The Change in Estonian Newsrooms’ Willingness to Outsource Journalistic Content Production
Marju Himma-Kadakas
Karlstad University, Sweden Mirjam Mõttus
University of Tartu, EstoniaEditors’ introduction: How to approach change in modern communications
Auksė Balčytienė (Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania),
Michał Głowacki (University of Warsaw, Poland)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 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
EDITORIAL: Mediating Change Changing Media: Dimensions and Perspectives
Vaia Doudaki
Charles University, Czech Republic Nico Carpentier
Charles University, Czech Republic
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw, PolandIn the spiral of mistrust: On the decline of public trust in Czech journalists
Jaromír Volek,
Marína Urbániková
(Masaryk University, Czech Republic)Political discourse on Polish commercial television. Case of “Fakty” TVN
Dorota Piontek
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
Media Framing: How Can the Constitutional Name of One Country Be Changed?
Eleonora Serafimovska
S S . CYRIL AND METHODIUS UNIVERSITY IN SKOPJE, NORTH MACEDONIA Marijana Markovikj
S S . CYRIL AND METHODIUS UNIVERSITY IN SKOPJE, NORTH MACEDONIAAn integrated model for public service media governance based on participatory governance and actor-centered institutionalism: Initial application to the independence of the Polish public broadcaster TVP S.A.*
Magdalena Ploch
(WWU University of Munster, Germany)Global de-Westernization trend in media studies and Russian journalism theory
Sergey G. Korkonosenko
(St. Petersburg State University, Russia)Spies like us: Media politics and the communist past in Bulgaria
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, 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 , SLOVAKIANews coverage of the first Polish presidency of the Council of the European Union (2011): Findings from an international comparative study
Romy Wohlert (Alpen-Andria-University Klagenfurt & Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria),
Stijn Joye (Ghent University, Belgium),
Agnieszka Stępińska (Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań, Poland),
Daniel Biltereyst (Ghent University, Belgium),
Khael Velders (Ghent University, Belgium)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
METHOD & CONCEPTS: Democracy and Digital Dissonance: The Co-Occurrence of the Transformation of Political Culture and Communication Infrastructure
Barbara Pfetsch
FREIE UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN, GERMANYPublic relations in society. A new approach to the difficult relationships between PR and its environment
Olaf Hoffjann
(Ostfalia University of Applied Sciences in Salzgitter, Germany)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Can the Church use media communication channels? Inherent features of media communication channels relative to religious messages in the media
Terézia Rončáková
(Catholic University in Ružomberok, Slovakia)The global society and its impact on public relations theorizing: Reflections on major macro trends
Chiara Valentini (Aarhus University, Denmark),
Dean Kruckeberg (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA),
Kenneth Starck (University of Iowa, USA)Transformations in Second-Order Campaigning: A German-Finnish Comparison of Campaign Professionalism in the 2004 and 2009 European Parliamentary Elections
Jens Tenscher (Austrian Academy of Sciences/Alpen-Adria-University of Klagenfurt, Austria),
Juri Mykkänen (University of Helsinki, Finland)Duality of Estonian Public Service Media in reflection of the world and in positioning society
Maarja Lõhmus, Helle Tiikmaa and Andres Jõesaar
(University of Tartu, Estonia)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 , NETHERLANDSThe impact of democratic conditionality on policy-making in Turkey: Minority rights and the politics of broadcast regulation
Burcu Sümer
(Ankara University, Turkey)Digital media practices in a conflict setting: Ukraine after the Maidan
Olena Nedozhogina
UNIVERSITY OF TARTU, ESTONIAMETHODS & CONCEPTS: Agglomerations relationality and in-betweenness: Re-learning to research agency in digital communication
Ignas Kalpokas
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, KAUNAS, LITHUANIA
& LCC INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY, KLAIPEDA, LITHUANIATail or no Tail? Applicability of the Long Tail Theory to the German Online Media Market
Céline Fabienne Kampes
UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCENCES DÜSSELDORF, GERMANYVolume 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
"Not a Political Virus": Manufacturing Consent by Czech Public Service Media in the Pandemic
Jan Motal
Masaryk University, Czech RepublicJournalists under Attack: Self-censorship as an Unperceived Method for Avoiding Hostility
Marju Himma-Kadakas
University of Tartu, Estonia Signe Ivask
Masaryk University, Czech RepublicVolume 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
Facebook Groups in Sweden Constructing Sustainability: Resisting Hegemonic Anthropocentrism
Vaia Doudaki
Charles University, Czech Republic Nico Carpentier
Charles University, Czech RepublicVolume 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
Revolutionary Music in Lebanon and Egypt: Alternative Imaginaries for Self-representation and Participation
Sahar Bou Hamdan
Northwestern University in Qatar, Qatar Bouthaina El-Kheshn
Georgetown University in Qatar, Qatar
The Populist Dimension of Mediated Discourses About Corruption in Romania
Delia Cristina Balaban
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Hanna Orsolya Vincze
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Mihnea S. Stoica
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Iulia Medveschi
Babes-Bolyai University, RomaniaVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
Editors' Introduction
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw Anda Rožukalne
Rīga Stradiņš UniversityPride and Compassion: How Emotional Strategies Target Audiences in Political Communication?
Patryk Wawrzyński
Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń, Poland; University of Szczecin, PolandVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
BOOK REVIEW: Patrick Ferrucci & Scott A. Eldridge (eds) (2022). The Institutions Changing Journalism: Barbarians Inside the Gate. Routledge 199 pp. ISBN: 978-0-367-69085-4 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-367-69090-8 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-14039-9 (ebk).
Aleksandra Seklecka
Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, PolandVolume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
Imaginings of the Future of Conflict and Communication Technologies: A Map of Four Anxiety and Two Hope Driven Scenarios
Nico Carpentier
Charles University, Czech Republic & Tallinn University, Estonia Andrea Miconi
IULM University, Italy