Results of searching entries for keyword: media theory
Global de-Westernization trend in media studies and Russian journalism theory
Sergey G. Korkonosenko
(St. Petersburg State University, Russia)Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Challenges and Opportunities for the Future of Media and Mass Communication Theory and Research: Positionality Integrative Research and Public Scholarship
Mark Deuze
University of Amsterdam, The NetherlandsVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
CONFERENCE REPORT: Conference of the European Media Management Association (emma) “Media Management and Actionable Knowledge: The Relationship between Theory and Practice” Limassol Cyprus June 5–7 2019
Dagmara Sidyk
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW Marlena Sztyber
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAWTail 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 2 (31) Spring 2022
BOOK REVIEW: Karen Donders (2021). Public Service Media in Europe. Law Theory and Practice. London and New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group 313 pp. ISBN: 978-1-138-477705
Alicja Jaskiernia
University of WarsawVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
INTERVIEW: Public Service Media Between Theory and Practice. Interview with Professor Karen Donders
Michał Głowacki Karen Donders
Vlaamse Radio- en TelevisieomroeporganisatieVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
METHODS & CONCEPTS: Media Capture Theory: A Paradigm Shift?
Péter Bajomi-Lázár
Budapest Business University, HungaryFrom media self-regulation to 'crowd-criticism': Media accountability in the digital age
Susanne Fengler
(Dortmund University of Technology, Germany)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 MACEDONIAPakistan media: Unnamed sources reveal political crises and law and order problems
Abhijit Mazumdar
(University of Tennessee in Knoxville, USA)Traditional and Online Media: Relationship between Media Preference Credibility Perceptions Predispositions and European Identity
Waqas Ejaz
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, ISLAMABAD, PAKISTANMedia effects in a transitional society: Setting the political agenda in the Kosovo elections of 2007
Lindita Camaj
(Indiana University School of Journalism, USA)Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Examining the populist communication logic: Strategic use of social media in populist political parties in Norway and Sweden
Bente Kalsnes
OSLO METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY, NORWAYVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Fact-checking initiatives as promoters of media and information literacy: The case of Poland
Michał Kuś
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAW Paulina Barczyszyn-Madziarz
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAWVolume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
INTERVIEW: Established media still matter
Interview with Prof. Dr. Christina Holtz-Bacha
Professor of Communications at Friedrich-Alexander-University
Erlangen-Nuremberg, GermanyVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
BOOK REVIEW: Ulla Carlsson (Ed.) (2019). Understanding Media and Information Literacy (MIL) in the Digital Age: A Question of Democracy. Gothenburg: Department of Journalism Media and Communication (JMG) University of Gothenburg 266 pp. ISBN: 978-91-88212-89-4.
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.2 (26).9
Auksė Balčytienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIABOOK REVIEW: Tobias Eberwein Susanne Fengler Epp Lauk Tanja Leppik-Bork (eds) (2011) Mapping Media Accountability in Europe and Beyond...
Yael de Haan
(University of Applied Sciences, Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Mediatized participation in European media systems
Dina Vozab,
Zrinjka Peruško
UNIVERSITY OF ZAGREB, CROATIAA walk in the public relations field: Theoretical discussions from a social media and network society perspective
Kaja Tampere
(Tallinn University, Estonia)Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Populism de-globalization and media competition: The spiral of noise
Henrik Müller
(Tu Dortmund University, Germany)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
BOOK REVIEW: Andrzej Baczyński Michał Drożdż et al. (2012). Convergence: Media in the Future...
Piotr Drąg
(The Pontificial University of John Paul II, Kraków, Poland)
The influence of the Council of Europe and other European institutions on the media law system in post-Soviet states
Andrei Richter
(Moscow State University, Russia)BOOK REVIEW: Jacek Dąbała (2010) Tajemnica i suspens w sztuce pisania. W kręgu retoryki dziennikarskiej i retoryki medialnej (Mystery and Suspense in Creative Writing. Journalistic Rhetoric and the Rhetoric of the Media)...
Marek Jan Pytko
(John Paul II Catholic University, Lublin)
INTERVIEW: Comparing Media Systems in Central and Eastern Europe
The interview with Prof. Daniel C. Hallin and Prof. Paolo Mancini was conducted by Adam Szynol and Michał Głowacki during the international conference Journalistic Culture in Different Media Systems in the Theoretical Perspective and Practice on 23rd February 2011, in Wrocław.
Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
Time for community media in Central and Eastern Europe
Urszula Doliwa (University of Warmia and Mazury, Poland),
Larisa Rankovic (University of Belgrade, Serbia)BOOK REVIEW: Daphne Skillen (2017). Freedom of Speech in Russia: politics and media from Gorbachev to Putin...
D.S. Novatorova
(University of Vienna, Austra)Volume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
BOOK REVIEW: Péter Bajomi-Lázár (ed.) (2017). Media in Theird-Wave Democracies. Southern and Central-Eastern Europe in a Comparative Perspective. Paris Budapest: L’Harmattan Publishing House pp. 238 ISBN: 978-2-343-13011-8.
Péter Kasztev
Budapest Business School, HungaryFacebook influences you more than me: The perceived impact of social media effects among young Facebook users
Nicoleta Corbu,
Oana Ştefăniţă,
Raluca Buturoiu
(National Univeristy of Political Studies and Public Administration, Romania)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
BOOK REVIEW: Antonio Momoc (2014) Comunicarea 2.0. New media participare si populism (Communication 2.0. New Media Participation and Populism)...
Romina Surugiu
(University of Bucharest, Romania)
An 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)Comparing media systems in new democracies: East meets South meets West
Katrin Voltmer
(University of Leeds, Great Britain)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
BOOK REVIEW: Elena Vartanova (2013). Постсоветские трансформации российских СМИ и журналистики [Post-Soviet Transformations of Russian Media and Journal- ism]...
Svetlana Bodrunova
(St. Petersburg State University, Russia)BOOK REVIEW: Daniel C. Hallin Paolo Mancini (eds) (2012) Comparing Media Systems Beyond the Western World. New York: Cambridge University Press pp. 345 ISBN 978-I-107-69954-0
Alicja Jaskiernia
(University of Warsaw, Poland)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
INTERVIEW: Media freedom in Central and Eastern Europe
Interview with Professor Andrei Richter — Director of the OSCE Office of the Representative on Freedom of the Media on the state of media freedom in Central and Eastern Europe
BOOK REVIEW: Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska (2011) Polski system medialny na rozdrożu. Media w polityce polityka w mediach [The Polish Media System at the Crossroads. Media on Politics Politics in Media]...
Alicja Jaskiernia
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
BOOK REVIEW: Jan Zielonka (ed.). (2015). Media and Politics in New Democracies: Europe in a Comparative Perspective...
Natalya Ryabinska
(Collegium Civitas, Warsaw)Local media and the “political brand”: Candidates attributes portrayed on local media and their consequences on public perceptions
Rocío Zamora
(Catholic University of Murcia, Spain)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
BOOK REVIEWS: Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska Bartłomiej Łódzki and Wayne Wanta (eds.) (2012) Agenda Setting: Old and New Problems in the Old and New Media...
Anna Paluch
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
BOOK REVIEW: David Buckingham (2019). The Media Education Manifesto. Cambridge UK: Polity Press 128 pp. ISBN: 978-1-509-53587-3.
Katrin Saks
TALLINN UNIVERSITY, ESTONIABOOK REVIEW: Miklós Sükösd and Karol Jakubowicz (eds.) (2011). Media Nationalism and European Identities...
Natalia Vasilendiuc
(University of Bucharest, Romania)
Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
A different kind of massive attack: How the Bulgarian Ultranationalist Party Ataka engineered its political success using electronic media
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
The importance of media literacy education: How Lithuanian students evaluate online news content credibility
Andrius Šuminas
VILNIUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Deimantas Jastramskis
VILNIUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIAVolume 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)Political communication in the EU: Civic potential of new media (case study: Poland)
Małgorzata Winiarska-Brodowska
(Jagiellonian University, Poland)INTERVIEW: Media accountability and transparency
Prof. Dr. Stephan Russ-Mohl was interviewed by Michał Głowacki in February 2012.
BOOK REVIEW: Adina Zemanek (ed.) (2014) Media in China China in the Media. Processes Strategies Images Identities...
Paweł Baranowski
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
Users' perception of media accountability
Harmen Groenhart
(Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
BOOK REVIEW: Douglas Kellner & Jeff Share (2019). The Critical Media Literacy Guide: Engaging Media and Transforming Education. Leiden: Brill Sense 125 pp. ISBN: 978-90- 04-40452-6.
Michael Forsman
SÖDERTÖRN UNIVERSITY, SWEDENDanish Public Service Broadcasting in transition: From monopoly to a digital media environment – a shift in paradigms
Poul Erik Nielsen
(University of a Aarhus, Denmark)Great expectations: On experiences with media reform in post-socialist Europe (and some unexpected outcomes)
Zrinjka Peruško
(University of Zagreb)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
The unlikely advocates of media literacy education: Jean-Jacques Rosseau and John Stuart Mill
Anamaria Neag
(Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Internet media as the digital public sphere: Possibilities and problems
Jakub Parnes
(University of Economics in Katowice, Poland)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Al Jazeera in the Central European media: 9/11 and the “Arab Spring” compared
Jaromir Hanzal (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic),
Ákos Balogh (Hungary),
Michalina Guzikowska (University of Warsaw, Poland),
Gabriela Mezeiova (Media Academy, Slovakia)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)Media for the Russian language minorities: The role of the Estonian Public Broadcasting (ERR) in 1990-2012
Andres Jõesaar (Tallin University Baltic Film and Media School, Estonia),
Salme Rannu (University of Tartu),
Maria Jufereva (University of Jyväskylä)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Contextualizing media behavior: Media environments and individuals' media use in the European Union
Matthew Loveless
(University of Kent, United Kingdom)Young people as a media audience: From content to usage processes
Anda Rožukalne
(Rīga Stradiņš University, Latvia)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
INTERVIEW: CEE media and communication research on the global map
Interview with Prof. Epp Lauk from University of Jyväskylä , Finland ORCID: 0000-0002-9697-2538 DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.12.1 (22).7 Full text: CEE media and communication research on the global map (PDF / 125.16 kb)
Social media in campaigning — citizens and politicians in the 2010 Swedish election
Annika Bergström
(University of Gothenburg, Sweden)Framing of European integration in Ukrainian media discourse
Oleksii Polegkyi
(Antwerp University, Belgium)Radio ombudsman services of Brazilian Public Radio (EBC) as media accountability instruments
Laurindo Leal Filho,
Fernando Oliveira Paulino,
Luiz Martins da Silva
(University of Brasilia, Brazil)Reduction of liberalism in Lithuanian media policy
Deimantas Jastramskis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)BOOK REVIEW: Lucyna Szot (2012) Dziennikarze mediów lokalnych w Polsce. Między profesjonalizmem a koniecznością przetrwania (Local media journalists in Poland. Between professionalism and need to survive)...
Anna Paluch
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Media ethics in the development of journalism in Nigeria
Nkechi M. Christopher (University of Ibadan, Nigeria)
Okereke Onwuka (Abia State University, Nigeria)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
Ability to spot and resist manipulated media news about international affairs: Does political knowledge provide it?
Vasyl V. Kucherenko (European University Institute in Florence, Italy),
Cindy T. Christen (Colorado State University, USA)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Forms of local media relations in local communities – case studies
Sylwia Męcfal
(University of Łódź, Poland)(Liberal) mass media and the (multi)party system in post-communist Lithuania
Irmina Matonytė
(European Humanities University in Vilnius, Lithuania)BOOK REVIEW: Maria Raicheva-Stover Elza Ibroscheva (eds.) (2014). Women in Politics and Media: Perspectives from Nations in Transition...
Paulina Barczyszyn
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
BOOK REVIEW: Gary Graham Anita Greenhill Donald Shaw and Chris J. Vargo (eds.). (2015). Content Is King. New Media Management in the Digital Age...
Julia Trzcińska
(University of Wrocław, Poland)Spies like us: Media politics and the communist past in Bulgaria
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)BOOK REVIEW: Maciej Miżejewski (2013). Ochrona pluralizmu w polityce medialnej Włoch [Pro- tection of Pluralism in Italian Media Policy]...
Marek Bankowicz
(Jagiellonian University)
Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Value orientation and national identity in Russia: A media effect study on the Holocaust documentary “Night and Fog”
Jürgen Grimm
(University of Vienna, Austria)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Media and the sacralization of history
Krzysztof Wasilewski
(Regional and Municipal Public Library in Gorzów Wielkopolski, Poland)Disaffected citizens in Croatia: Analysis of socio-demographic and media use influences on political participation
Dina Vozab
(University of Zagreb, Croatia)Comparing Nordic media systems: North between West and East?
Lars Nord
(Mid Sweden University in Sundsvall, Sweden)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
BOOK REVIEW: Karol Jakubowicz (2013) Media a demokracja w XXI wieku. Poszukiwanie nowych modeli (Media and democracy in the 21st century...
Alicja Jaskiernia
(University of Warsaw, Poland)BOOK REVIEW: Eric Klinenberg (2007) Fighting for Air: The Battle to Control America’s Media...
Ilona Biernacka-Ligięza
(University of Opole, Poland)
BOOK REVIEW: Michał Głowacki & Alicja Jaskiernia (eds.) (2017). Public Service Media Renewal: Adaptation to Digital Network Challenges. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang Edition pp. 249 ISBN: 978-3-631-67728-5.
Beata Klimkiewicz
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLANDBOOK REVIEW: Nico Carpentier (2011). Media and Participation. A Site of Ideological-Democratic Struggle...
Michał Głowacki
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
BOOK REVIEW: Janina Fras (2013) O typologii wypowiedzi medialnych i dziennikarskich (On typology of media and journalism genres)...
Bartłomiej Krzysztan
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
BOOK REVIEW: Ewa Nowak (2014). Ustanawianie agendy politycznej przez media. Efekt newsa w Polsce [Media-Policy Agenda-Setting. The News Effect in Poland]...
Bartłomiej Łódzki
(University of Lower Silesia, Poland)
Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to Turkey as a global media event: A “frame shift” in media coverages
Gulen Kurt Oncel and Ergen Devrim Karagoz
(Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey)Media pluralism policy in a post-socialist Mediterranean media system: The case of Croatia
Zrinjka Peruško
(University of Zagreb, Croatia)Party system and media in Poland after 1989
Piotr Sula
(University of Wrocław, Poland)Multimedia development of PSBs: A challenge for the Nordic Media Systems
Johann Roppen (Volda University College, Norway),
Anker Brink Lund (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark),
Lars Nord (Mid Sweden University, Sweden)The Romanian media market: Juridical and economic aspects
Andra Seceleanu
(Andrei Șaguna University, Romania)Introducing the panspectric challenge: A reconfiguration of regulatory values in a multiplatform media landscape
Jonas Andersson Schwarz (Södertörn University, Sweden),
Karl Palmås (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)Seeking the H Zone: How we mix media messages to create compatible community in the emerging papyrus society
Donald Shaw (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA),
Sherine El-Toukhy (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA),
Tom Terry (Idaho State University, USA)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Media literacy as a cross-sectoral phenomenon: Media education in Finnish ministerial-level policies
Lauri Palsa
NATIONAL AUDIOVISUAL INSTITUTE, FINLAND Saara Salomaa
NATIONAL AUDIOVISUAL INSTITUTE, FINLANDRussian journalists and social media: updated transitions and new challenges
Elena Johansson and Gunnar Nygren
(Södertörn University, Sweden)INTERVIEW: Culture and media systems
Interview with Peter Gross
Changing political attitudes towards media accountability in Sweden
Torbjörn von Krogh
(Mid Sweden University, Sweden)Editors’ introduction: Media accountability — between tradition and innovation
Epp Lauk (University of Jyväskylä, Finland),
Michał Kuś (University of Wrocław, Poland)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
INTERVIEW: Polish media studies between past and future. The role of the Press Research Centre (OBP) in Cracow
Prof. Dr. Walery Pisarek was interviewed by Paulina Barczyszyn in November 2013
Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Editor’s introduction: Media and information literacy research in countries around the Baltic Sea
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.2 (26).1 Maarit Jaakkola
Guest EditorMapping the Moldovan media system and journalism culture
Natalia Milewski
(University of Bucharest, Romania)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Pro-active media accountability? — an Austrian perspective
Klaus Bichler (Medienhaus Wien, Austria),
Matthias Karmasin (University of Klagenfurt, Austria),
Daniela Kraus (FJUM Forum for Journalism and Media, Austria)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)Television: the challenges of pluralism to media regulation
Lilia Raycheva
(Sofia University St. Kliment Okhridski, Bulgaria)INTERVIEW: Democracy and new media in Central and Eastern Europe
Dr. Karol Jakubowicz was interviewed by Michał Głowacki in November 2011
Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
INTERVIEW: The Hungarian media system under political pressure
Interview with Prof. Péter Bajomi-Lázár
Assessing potentials of journalists’ blogs as an instrument of media accountability in Estonia
Halliki Harro-Loit,
Juhan Lang,
Marju Himma-Kadakas
(University of Tartu, Estonia)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)BOOK REVIEW: Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska & Michał Głowacki (eds.) (2011). Making Democracy in 20 Years. Media and Politics in Central and Eastern Europe...
Katarzyna Pokorna-Ignatowicz
(Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski Cracow University College, Poland)
Editors’ introduction: Public Service Media in Central and Northern Europe. Does the State still matter?
Lars Nord (Mid Sweden University, Sweden),
Michał Głowacki (University of Wrocław, Poland)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 , NETHERLANDSMedia culture and professionalism in reporting on minority issues in Bulgaria: Practices and problems
Bissera Zankova
(Bulgaria)INTERVIEW: The perspectives of media and agenda-setting research in times of Big Data
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.11.2 (21).7Interview with Prof. Wayne Wanta
ORCID: 0000-0002-9337-4006
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA , USAFULL TEXT: The-perspectives-of-media-and-agenda-setting-research (PDF / 103.57 kb)Media pluralism by default: The case of Moldova
John H. Parmelee
(University of North Florida, USA)Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
‘Model Putin Forever’: A Critical Discourse Analysis on Vladimir Putin’s Portrayal in Czech Online News Media
Zina Stovickova
Metropolitan University Prague, Czech RepublicBulgarian media policy and law: How much Europeanization
Nelly Ognyanova
(Sofia University, Bulgaria)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
BOOK REVIEW: Agnieszka Ogonowska Grzegorz Ptaszek (eds.) (2013) Współczesna psycholo- gia mediów. Nowe problemy i perspektywy badawcze (Modern Media Psychology. New Problems and Research Perspectives)...
Karina Cicha and Katarzyna Zdanowicz-Cyganiak
(University of Economics in Katowice, Poland)
BOOK REVIEW: Marta Dyczok and Oxana Golutvina (eds.) (2009). Media Democracy and Reform: The Post-Communism Experience: (Interdisciplinary Studies on Central and Eastern Europe 6)...
Anastasiia Grynko
(The National University of "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy" in Kyiv, Ukraine)
Public Service Media Fee to substitute Television Fee in Finland?
Taisto Hujanen
(University of Tampere, Finland)Of Polish politicians and (their) media. The pursuit of regulatory agency independence in Polish media law and practice
Marcin Ożóg
(The European Centre For Comparative Commercial and Company Law)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Media education in the common interest: Public perceptions of media literacy policy in Latvia
Anda Rožukalne
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIA Ilva Skulte
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIA Alnis Stakle
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIAWhat is media assistance and (why) does it matter? The Case of Polish Foreign Aid to the Media in Belarus and Ukraine
Aleksandra Galus
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY, POZNAŃ, POLANDDigital media practices in a conflict setting: Ukraine after the Maidan
Olena Nedozhogina
UNIVERSITY OF TARTU, ESTONIAEditor’s introduction: The highways and byways of “Europeanization” in the media
Karol Jakubowicz
(Poland)Nuclear media discourses after the closure of the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant: Is the game over?
Natalija Mažeikienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Judita Kasperiūnienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Ilona Tandzegolskienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIAVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
INTERVIEW: Media re-education and the need to be constantly updated
Interview with Grzegorz Ptaszek
interviewed by Maarit Jaakkola
AGH UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN KRAKOW, POLAND DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.2 (26).8Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
The Image of Germany in Social Media: Political and Social Aspects of Public Service Media in Poland
Agnieszka Węglińska
UNIVERSITY OF LOWER SILESIA , POLANDBOOK REVIEW: Anders Hansen David Machin (2019). Media and Communication Research Methods. London: Red Globe Press; 2nd ed. 314 pp. ISBN: 978-1-137-52824-7
Paulina Barczyszyn-Madziarz
UNIVERSITY OF WROCŁAWBOOK REVIEW: Jukka Kortti (2019). Media in History: An Introduction to the Meanings and Transformations of Communication over Time. London: Red Globe Press 248 pp. ISBN: 978-1352005950-0.
László Petrovszki
UNIVERSITY OF SZEGED, HUNGARY DOI: 10.51480/1899-5101.13.3 (27).10Volume 15 No 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
Politicizing Poland’s Public Service Media: The Analysis of Wiadomości News Program
Katarzyna Gajlewicz-Korab
University of Warsaw, Poland Łukasz Szurmiński
University of Warsaw, Poland
Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
BOOK REVIEW: TERRY FLEW (2018). UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL MEDIA. SECOND EDITION. LONDON: PALGRAVE MACMILLAN 227 PP. ISBN: 978-1-137-44653-4.
Orsolya Szabó Palócz
UNIVERSITY OF SZEGED, HUNGARYVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
BOOK REVIEW: Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova (2018). Russia’s Liberal Media. Handcuffed but Free. New York-London: Routledge pp. 221 ISBN: 978-1-315-30019-1 (ebk).
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.1 (25).10 Weronika Pajor
ZHEJIANG UNIVERSITYSocial Media News: A Comparative Analysis of the Journalistic Uses of Twitter
Rosella Rega
University of Siena, ItalyVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
BOOK REVIEW: Alicja Jaskiernia (2018). Monitoring wolności mediów w Europie [Monitoring Media Freedom in Europe]. Warsaw: Oficyna Wydawnicza ASPRA-JR pp. 487 ISBN: 978-83-7545-840-4
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.1 (25).12 Anna Jupowicz-Ginalska
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAWVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
CONFERENCE REPORT: The Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award
Michał Głowacki
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW Dagmara Sidyk
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAWVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
BOOK REVIEW: Damian Guzek (2019). Mediatizing Secular State: Media Religion and Politics in Contemporary Poland. Berlin: Peter Lang pp. 333 ISBN: 978-3-631-77535-6.
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.13.1 (25).11 Rafał Leśniczak
CARDINAL STEFAN WYSZYŃSKI UNIVERSITY IN WARSAWVolume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
CONFERENCE REPORT: The 5th Congress of the Polish Communication Association “Media Power: People–Organisations–Technologies” Warsaw Poland September 19–21 2019
Dagmara Sidyk
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW Marlena Sztyber
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAWINTERVIEW: Studying Media Systems in the Era of Digital Media. Interview with Professor Daniel C. Hallin
Agnieszka Stępińska
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland Daniel C. Hallin
University of California, San Diego, United StatesVolume 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 RepublicEVENTS: Online Conference of Young Scientists: "Media and Social Communication – 1st Edition. Coronavirus – Challenges of Modern Society” (May 15-16 2020)
Marlena Sztyber
University of WarsawEVENTS: The Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award in 2020 - Winner Announced
Dagmara Sidyk
University of WarsawWar or Peace Journalism? Study of Media Coverage by Russian Media Outlets of the Trade War Between China and the USA
Viktor Tuzov
City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SARMedia Exposure to Conspiracy vs. Anti-conspiracy Information. Effects on the Willingness to Accept a COVID-19 Vaccine
Raluca Buturoiu
National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania Alexandru Cristian Dumitrache
National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania Georgiana Udrea
National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania Nicoleta Corbu
National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, RomaniaVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
EVENTS: THE MEDIA AND DEMOCRACY KAROL JAKUBOWICZ AWARD 2021: NOMINEES
Michał Głowacki
Dagmara SidykVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
EVENTS: 11th National Methological Conference of Media Experts "Virtual: Words Societies Identities" Warsaw Poland 19-20 2020
Marlena Sztyber,
Katarzyna Piórecka
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND
Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
EVENTS: RIPE@DIALOGUE. A WEBINAR SERIES ON UNIVERSALISM AND PUBLIC SERVICE MEDIA GOTHENBURG SWEDEN SEPTEMBER 9 16 AND 23 2020
Dagmara Sidyk
Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
EVENTS: THE 4TH PILLAR OF DEMOCRACY: FREE MEDIA AND MEDIA SELF-REGULATION IN POLAND WARSAW POLAND SEPTEMBER 25 2020
Jacek Mikucki
Dagmara SidykEVENT: Establishing Effective Media Self-Regulation in Poland. Media Accountability Working Group Meeting in Gdańsk and Sopot
Isabella Kurkowski
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism in Dortmund Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw, PolandThe Mass Media’s Systemic Contribution to Political Transformation: Coverage of the 1956 Uprising in Hungarian Print Media (June 1988–June 1989)
Indira Dupuis
Free University Berlin, German[BOOK REVIEW] ZRINJKA PERUŠKO DINA VOZAB AND ANTONIJA ČUVALO (2021). COMPARING POST-SOCIALIST MEDIA SYSTEMS – THE CASE OF SOUTHEAST EUROPE. LONDON AND NEW YORK: ROUTLEDGE TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP 301 PP. ISBN 978-0-367-22677-0
Aleksandra Krstić
University of Belgrade, SerbiaVolume 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, Poland[EVENT] 13TH CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN COMMUNICATION AND MEDIA CONFERENCE CEECOM 2021: “THE NEW COMMUNICATION REVOLUTION” CRACOW POLAND OCTOBER 21–23 2021 (ONLINE)
Michał Głowacki
PROFESSOR KAREN DONDERS WINS THE MEDIA AND DEMOCRACY KAROL JAKUBOWICZ AWARD
Michał Głowacki & Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
Volume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
Media Ownership Transparency and Editorial Autonomy as Corporate Social Responsibility in the Media Industry. The Case of Latvia
Ainārs Dimants
Rīga Stradiņš UniversityVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
EVENT: The Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award 2022 Nominees
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw Michał Głowacki
University of WarsawEVENT: The VI Congress of the Polish Communication Association “Media and Society in the Age of Platforms Algorithms and Data”. Gdańsk Poland September 22-24 2022
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw, PolandBOOK 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, PolandEVENT: Professor Urszula Doliwa Wins The Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award 2022
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw, Poland Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw, PolandBOOK REVIEW: Daniela Dimitrova (ed.). Global Journalism: Understanding World Media Systems. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers pp 258. ISBN: 1538146851.
Márton Demeter
National University of Public Service, Hungary Bence Varga
National University of Public Service, HungaryVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
EVENT: Round Table Discussion: "Enhancing Independent and Effective Media Self-Regulation in Poland". Warsaw Poland January 28 2022
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw Jacek Mikucki
University of Warsaw Isabella Kurkowski
The Erich Brost Institute for International JournalismVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
Decoding Media Impact and Datafication in Diverse Cultural Media Contexts. Editors’ Introduction
Päivi Maijanen
LUT University, Business School, Finland Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw, Poland
Volume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
Estonia’s Russian-speaking Audience’s Media Attitudes Preferences and Susceptibility to the Spread of Fake News and Information Disorder in Media Outlets
Mihhail Kremez
University of Tartu, EstoniaVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
The Impact of the Media in Election Campaign During the COVID-19 Pandemic. The Case of Kosovo
Arben Fetoshi
University of Prishtina, Kosovo Remzie Shahini-Hoxhaj
University of Prishtina, KosovoVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
EVENT: Three publications competing for the Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award 2023
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw Michał Głowacki
University of WarsawVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
BOOK REVIEW: Susanne Fengler Tobias Eberwein Matthias Karmasin (eds) (2022). The Global Handbook of Media Accountability Oxon and New York: Routledge 614 pp. ISBN: 978-0-367-34628-7. DOI: 10.4324/9780429326943.
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw, PolandVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
Big Data Techniques to Study the Impact of Gender-Based Violence in the Spanish News Media
Hugo J. Bello
University of Valladolid, Spain Nora Palomar-Ciria
Complejo Asistencial de Soria, Spain Elisa Gallego
the Carlos III Health Institute in Madrid, Spain Lourdes Jiménez Navascués
University of Valladolid, Spain Celia Lozano
AI Department in Bosonit, SpainVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
Bulgarian Media Since 1989: From Instrumentalization to Capture
Ivo Indzhov
Freelance Researcher, BulgariaVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
BOOK REVIEW: Ján Višňovský Juliána Mináriková Miroslav Kapec (2022): Slovenský mediálny priemysel [The Slovak Media Industry]. Praha: Wolters Kluwer 135 pp. ISBN: 978-80-7676-596-2.
Magdaléna Ungerová
University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in TrnavaVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
EVENT: Breaking Down the Walls? Old and New Barriers to Social Cohesion in Arts Culture and Media Warsaw Poland May 11 2023
Tanya Sakzewski
Media Diversity Institute GlobalThe Legislation for Video‑Sharing Platforms on the European Audiovisual Market. The Polish Transposition of Audio‑Visual Media Services Directive
Agnieszka Grzesiok-Horosz
University of Silesia, PolandVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
INTERVIEW: Media Culture Kaleidoscopes: The Core of a Media System. Interview with Professor Peter Gross
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw, Poland Peter Gross
University of Tennessee, USAEVENT: The Threats Challenges and Opportunities in the Changing Central and Eastern European Media Environments. CEECOM Conference Brno Czechia June 29–30 2023
Agnieszka Węglińska
University of Lower SilesiaEVENT: Slavko Splichal Wins the Media and Democracy Karol Jakubowicz Award 2023
Dagmara Sidyk-Furman
University of Warsaw Michał Głowacki
University of WarsawVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
EDITORIAL: Media Capture and Transitional Settings: Towards Theoretical and Empirical Developments
Mireya Márquez‑Ramírez
Universidad Iberoamericana Mexico City, Mexico Nelson Costa Ribeiro
Universidade Católica Portuguesa, PortugalVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
The Capture Effect: How Media Capture Affects Journalists Markets and Audiences
Marius Dragomir
Central European University in Vienna, Austria and University of Santiago de Compostela, SpainVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
INTERVIEW: Media Capture in the Post-Truth Era: media freedom is a function of the quality of democracy. Interview with Professor Alina Mungui-Pippidi
Bissera Zankova
Media 21 Foundation, Bulgaria Alina Mungui-Pippidi
European Research Centre for Anti-Corruption and State-Building (ERCAS); LUISS Guido Carli University in Rome, ItalyVolume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
The Future of Gender and Gender Equality Online: A Scenario Analysis of Imaginaries on Gender and Social Media Platforms
Babette Lagrange
CIMS – Ghent University, Belgium Sofie Van Bauwel
CIMS – Ghent University, Belgium Daniel Biltereyst
CIMS – Ghent University, Belgium Sara Cannizzaro
IULM University, Italy Justine Toms
New Bulgarian University, Bulgaria Yasemin Ağca
Bilkent University, Türkiye Ingrid Andersson
International Organisation for Knowledge Economy and Enterprise Development, Sweden Emma Bjorner
International Organisation for Knowledge Economy and Enterprise Development, Sweden Achilleas Karadimitriou
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Klára Odstrčilová
Charles University, Czech Republic Stylianos Papathanassopoulos
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Elisabetta Risi
IULM University, Italy Valentina Latronico
Università della Svizzera Italiana, ItalyVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
Captured by Elites: The Portuguese Media System in Liberalism (1820–1926)
Isadora de Ataíde Fonseca
Catholic University of Portugal, PortugalVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
Can Social Media Expand Public Discourse in a ‘Captured’ Mediascape? The Case of Greece
Michael Nevradakis
College Year in Athens, GreeceVolume 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, MongoliaVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
Media Capture and Perspectives for Media Development in a Fragile Media System: Debating Journalistic Roles in Guinea‑Bissau
Johanna Mack
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism, GermanyVolume 17 No 2 (36) Special Issue 2024
EVENT: Where do Dangers to Modern Media Come from? “Captured Media: Exploring Media Systems in and after Transitions”. Lisbon December 5–6 2022
Bissera Zankova
Media 21 Foundation, BulgariaVolume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Internet meme as meaningful discourse: towards a theory of multiparticipant popular online content
Jakub Nowak
(Maria Curie-Sklodowska University in Lublin, Poland)Volume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
Surpassing the era of disengaged acceptance: The future of public discourse on nuclear energy
Gabor Sarlos
Rmit University, Vietnam
Mariann Fekete
University of Szeged, HungarySetting students’ professional agenda in the classroom
Raquel Rodríguez
(Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain)Errand Boy or Entrepreneur? Journalists’ Expectations of Their Future Roles in Finland
Vilma Luoma-aho,
Mikko Leppänen,
Turo Uskali
(University of Jyväskylä, Finland)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
European Elections National Agenda: Facebook in the 2019 Romanian EP Elections
Flavia Ţăran
BABEȘ-BOLYAI UNIVERSITY, CLUJ -NAPOCA , ROMANIA Alexandra Catalina Ormenișan
BABEȘ-BOLYAI UNIVERSITY, CLUJ -NAPOCA , ROMANIAEVENT: 15 Years of DTA. Online Seminar December 9 2022
Kristyna Koprivova
Charles University, Prague, CzechiaVolume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
Futures of algorithms and choices: Structuration of algorithmic imaginaries and digital platforms in Europe
Miloš Hroch
Charles University, Czech Republic Panos Kompatsiaris
IULM University, Italy Volker Grassmuck
Leibniz Institute for Media Research Hans-Bredow-Institut (HBI), Germany José Moreno
MediaLab CIES – University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Lutz Peschke
Bilkent University, Türkiye Jan Jirák
Charles University, Czech Republic Debashmita Poddar
Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, ItalyVolume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Campaigning on Facebook: Posts and online social networking as campaign tools in the 2017 general elections in the Republic of Kosovo
Dren Gërguri
UNIVERSITY OF PRISHTINA ‘’HASAN PRISHTINA”, KOSOVOVolume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
Through the Eyes of Early Childhood Students: Television Tablet Computers Internet and Smartphones
Halit Buluthan Çetintaş,
Zeynep Turan
Ataturk University in Erzurum, TurkeyPropaganda against the West in the Heart of Europe. A masked official state campaign in Hungary
Márton Demeter
KAROLI GASPAR UNIVERSITY OF THE REFORMED CHURCH, HUNGARYVolume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
10 Years of the Polish Communication Association
Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska
University of Wrocław
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw
Editors of the Central European Jurnal of CommunicationIn the spiral of mistrust: On the decline of public trust in Czech journalists
Jaromír Volek,
Marína Urbániková
(Masaryk University, Czech Republic)Communicating with citizens? Representations of public opinion in Polish public discourse
Robert Szwed
(Catholic University of Lublin, Poland)Political discourse on Polish commercial television. Case of “Fakty” TVN
Dorota Piontek
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)The tabloidization of political discourse: The Polish case
Dorota Piontek
(Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland)Volume 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, USAVolume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Between neutrality and engagement: Political journalism in Hungary
Péter Bajomi-Lázár
(Budapest Business school, Hungary)Polish discourses concerning the Spanish Civil War. Analysis of the Polish press 1936–2015
Wojciech Opioła
(University of Opole, Poland)
Polish and Swedish journalist-politician Twitter networks: Who are the gatekeepers?
Elena Johansson
UMEÅ UNIVERSITY, SWEDENJacek Nożewski
UNIVERSITY OF WROCŁ AW, POLANDPublic service market? Commercial activities of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK)
Johann Roppen
(Volda University College, Norway)Public relations and strategic management: Institutionalizing organization–public relationships in contemporary society
James E. Grunig
(University of Maryland, USA)The news ombudsman: Lightning rod or watchdog?
Huub Evers
(Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands)Blessing or curse of the digital world – perceptions of online anonymity in Polish daily newspapers
Kornelia Trytko
(Notthingam Trent University, United Kingdom)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
The natural framing of military conflict news. The 2008 war in Georgia in Resonance Izvestia and The New York Times
Ekaterina Basilaia (Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Georgia),
Robert McKeever (University of South Carolina, U.S.A.),
Donald Shaw (University of North Carolina, U.S.A.)Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
The utilization of journalistic sources in the national press: Communicating the transition from economic crisis to sustainable growth
Theodora Maniou,
Irene Photiou,
Nikleia Eteokleous,
Ioannis Seitanidis
(Frederick University of Cyprus & Open University of Cyprus, Cyprus)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Who defines the narrative of a crisis? The case of an Estonian online boycott campaign against an international supermarket chain
Päivi Tampere, Kaja Tampere, Scott Abel
(Tallin University, Estonia)Fox News and the polarization of attitudes in the U.S.
Wayne Wanta
(University of Missouri–Columbia, USA)Volume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
The outsiders looking in!: EU and diaspora journalists’ refl ections on journalistic roles in British press coverage of the EU Referendum
Olatunji Ogunyemi
University of Lincoln, UKPolitical advertising - a research overview
Christina Holtz-Bacha
FRIEDRICH-ALEX ANDER -UNIVERSITÄT ERL ANGEN-NÜRNBERG, GERMANYPublic 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, POLANDAgenda setting priming framing – TV news in Poland during election campaigns 2005 and 2007. Comparative analysis
Ewa Nowak (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, Poland),
Rafał Riedel (University of Oslo, Norway)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Facebook as an alternative public space: The use of Facebook by Ukrainian journalists during the 2012 parlimentary election
Dariya Orlova and Daria Taradai
(National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Regional — national — supranational. How the German press covers election campaigns on different levels of the political system
Jürgen Wilke and Melanie Leidecker
(Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
INTERVIEW: Profession in transition: Journalistic professionalism and its changes in Central and Eastern Europe
Prof. Dr. Jane Leftwitch Curry was interviewed by Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska in November 2012
Remixing international news reporting: Towards a renewed confederacy of correspondences
Paulo Nuno Vicente
(UT Austin-Portugal Digital Media Programme)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 , SLOVAKIA“I went to resist. I’ll be back”: Otekilerin Postasi as an example of citizen journalism in Turkey
Dilek Özhan Koçak
(Giresum University, Turkey)Election coverage in Poland 2005: A content analysis of the main TV news programs
Bartłomiej Łódzki
(University of Lower Silesia, Poland)Constitutional debate in the Czech Republic
Vlastimil Nečas
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Economic foundations of morality: Questions of transparency and ethics in Russian journalism
Anna Klyueva (University of Houston-Clear Lake, USA),
Katerina Tsetsura (University of Oklahoma, USA)Press concentration convergence and innovation: Europe in search of a new communications policy
Lou Lichtenberg
(The Netherlands Press Fund in The Hague, The Netherlands)The European Parliament election of 2009 in Poland: The agenda-setting in the Polish Internet news portals
Wojciech Walczak
(Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland)The role of PR in healthcare and social insurance reform in Poland and the United States
Michael Szporer (University of Maryland, USA),
Jacek Barlik (Woodstock Leasor Warszawa, Poland)Emerging patterns and trends in citizen journalism in Africa: The case of Zimbabwe
Bruce Mutsvairo and Simon Columbus
(Amsterdam University College, The Netherlands)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, EstoniaConstructing identity on social networks. An analysis of competences of communication constituted on Facebook.com
David Dobrowsky
(University of Vienna, Austria)Political campaign communication in Sweden: Change but not too much
Lars Nord
(Mid Sweden University in Sundsvall, Sweden)Recreating journalism after censorship. Generational shifts and professional ambiguities among journalists after changes in the political systems
Epp Lauk
(University of Tartu, Estonia; University of Jyväskylä, Finland),
Svennik Hoyer
(University of Oslo, Norway)Ukrainian journalists’ perceptions of unethical practices: Codes and everyday ethics
Anastasia Grynko
(National University "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy", Ukraine)Mission (im)possible. The case of Lithuanian Public Service Broadcasting
Žygintas Pečiulis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)Can a “Lone wolf” quasi-investigative journalist substitute low functionality of the law enforcement system?
Andrej Školkay
(School of Communication and Media, Bratislava, Slovakia)Old and new constraints in foreign news coverage in post-communist Ukraine
Natalya Ryabinska
(Ukrainian Catholic Universiyty in Lviv, Ukraine)The role of European political parties in closing the communication gap within the European Union. A critical view
Michał Jacuński
(University of Wrocław, Poland)Agency awakening and the audiovisual: Developments in late-Soviet Latvian Broadcasting
Sergei Kruk (Rīga Stradiņš University, Latvia),
Janis Chakars (University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA)On the way to dumbing down… The case of Central Europe
Angelika W. Wyka
(Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Germany)Journalists and politicians in television interviews after elections: A redefinition of roles?
Dorota Piontek and Bartosz Hordecki
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Texts soaked with culture: The impact of cultural differences on the thematic structure of British and Polish national dailies
Anna Zięba
(Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland)Mediatization of political life in conditions of electoral campaign – a retrospection of the elections in Romania
Andra Seceleanu
(Andrei Saguna University in Constanta, Romania)Challenges and prospects of delivering a diversity of public service content online: A case study of Channel 4 News Online
Olatunji Ogunyemi
(University of Lincoln, United Kingdom)Selected aspects of political marketing in Slovakia
Antónia Štensová (University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice, Czech Republic),
Peter Štarchoň (Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia)The agenda-setting studies in Turkey
Erkan Yüksel
(Anadolu University, Turkey)The development of online political communication in Poland in European Parlimentary elections 2014: Technological innovation versus old habits
Michał Jacuńsk and Paweł Baranowski
(University of Wroclaw, Poland)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
How news domestication of news may blur the conflict: Coverage of 2008 South Ossetia war in Ukraine
Daria Taradai
(National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine)Past present and future of Public Service Broadcasting in Germany
Olexiy Khabyuk
(University of Cologne, Germany)Red danger before elections: Trick or threat?
Jan Křeček and Lenka Vochocová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)What will be the future for Local Broadcasting in Norway?
Ilona Biernacka-Ligięza
(University of Opole, Poland; University of Oslo, Norway)EU structural funds’ publicity and the practice of journalism and public relations in Lithuania
Laima Nevinskaitė
(Vilnius University)Advertising in communication of the Catholic Church. The case of Poland
Krzysztof Stępniak
CARDINAL STEFAN WYSZYŃSKI UNIVERSITY IN WARSAW, POLANDVolume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Guest Editor's introduction
Peter Gross
(School of Journalism & Electronic Media, The University of Tennessee, U.S.A.)Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Zelensky’s Image in the Russian and Ukrainian News: Presidential Campaign 2019 in Ukraine
Katrin Dkhair
Higher School of Economics, National Research University in Saint Petersburg, Russia Polina Klochko
Higher School of Economics, National Research University in Saint Petersburg, RussiaVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
“Protect our homeland!” Populist communication in the 2018 Hungarian election campaign on Facebook
Tamás Tóth
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Dalma Kékesdi-Boldog
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Tamás Bokor
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Zoltán Veczán
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARYThe country of origin principle and competition among national regulatory régimes in East Central Europe
Gábor Polyák and Gergely László Szőke
(University of Pécs, Hungary)American political campaigns
William L. Benoit
(Ohio University, USA)EU regulatory framework and the political economy of terrestrial digitalisation in Slovakia
Branislav Ondrášik
(Bratislava School of Law, Slovakia)Public Service Broadcasting in Latvia: Old images new user needs and market pressure
Inta Brikše
(University of Latvia in Riga, Latvia)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
Crowdsourcing the mainstream. An analysis of the most frequently posted links on Facebook
Wojciech Walczak
(Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland)Formation of Estonian broadcasting landscape 1994–2007: Experience of the transition state. Impact of the EU legislation on the Estonian television broadcasting since mid 1990s.
Andres Jõesaar
(Tartu University, Estonia)Digital switchover in Hungary. European policies and national circumstances
Márk Lengyel
(Council of Europe)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)Fear of Missing Out scale - a nationwide representative CAWI survey in Poland
Anna Jupowicz-Ginalska
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND Małgorzata Kisilowska
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND Tomasz Baran
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND & ARIADNA RESEARCH PANEL Aleksander Wysocki
ARIADNA RESEARCH PANEL Justyna Jasiewicz
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLANDVolume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Educating citizens to EU: How policies and communication strategies are implementing in Italy
Lucia D’Ambrosi
(University of Macerata, Italy)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
Between Dialogue and Confrontation: Two Countries — One Profession Project and the Split in Ukrainian Journalism Culture
Liudmila Voronova
SÖDERTÖRN UNIVERSITY, SWEDENProfile of public relations practitioners in Poland: Research results
Dariusz Tworzydło
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND Przemysław Szuba
EX ACTO SP. Z O . O . , POLAND Norbert Życzyński
COMMIT POL AND SP. Z O . O . , POLANDVolume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Empirical research on the functions of audiovisual advertising from the perspective of recipients - students of the Journalism and Social Communication Faculty at the University of Łódź
Agnieszka Barczyk-Sitkowska
UNIVERSITY OF ŁÓDŹ , POLAND, Mateusz Krzekotowski
UNIVERSITY OF ŁÓDŹ , POLANDVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
METHODS/RESEARCH: Some remarks on the comparative experiment as a method in assessing populist political communication in Europe
Dominika Kasprowicz
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLAND Agnieszka Hess
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLANDVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Meme literacy in Russia: Perceptions of internet memes by a student audience and issues of critical thinking
Svetlana Shomova
NATIONAL RESEARCH UNIVERSITY HIGHER SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS, RUSSIAVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
BOOK REVIEW: CHRISTIAN HOFMANN AND MONICA KIRNER-LUDWIG (EDS.) (2020). TELECINEMATIC STYLISTICS. LONDON: BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC 352 PP. ISBN: 9781350042872.
Małgorzata Lisowska-Magdziarz
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLANDVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
Migration Coverage in Europe Russia and the United States. A comparative Analysis of Coverage in 17 countries (2015-2018)
Marcus Kreutler
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism, TU Dortmund University
Susanne Fengler
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism, TU Dortmund University Nastaran Asadi
Complutense University of Madrid Svetlana Bodrunova
St. Petersburg State University Halyna Budivska
National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Layire Diop
Francis Marion University, South Carolina Georgia Ertz
Università della Svizzera Italiana, Lugano Daria Gigola
University of Wrocław Eszter Katus
Mérték Media Monitor, Budapest Denisa Kovacs
University of Bucharest Michał Kuś
University of Wrocław Filip Láb
Charles University Prague Anna Litvinenko
Freie Universität Berlin Johanna Mack
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism, TU Dortmund University Scott Maier
UO School of Journalism and Communication, Eugene Ana Pinto Martinho
ISCTE - University Institute of Lisbon Antonia Matei
University of Bucharest Kaitlin C. Miller
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA Lisa Oppermann
Erich Brost Institute for International Journalism, TU Dortmund University Eva Pérez Vara
Complutense University of Madrid Gábor Polyák
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest Rajeev Ravisankar
UO School of Journalism and Communication, Eugene Carlos Rodríguez Pérez
Universidad de La Sabana Dimitrina J. Semova
Complutense University of Madrid Dimitris Skleparis
Newcastle University Sergio Splendore
Università degli Studi di Milano Sandra Štefaniková
Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University Prague Adam Szynol
University of Wrocław Décio Telo
ISCTE – University Institute of Lisbon Rrapo Zguri
University of TiranaREVIEW STUDY: Thinking in the Network
Slavomír Gálik
UNIVERSITY OF SS. CYRIL AND METHODIUS IN TRNAVA, SLOVAKIAJournalists 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
Climate Change in Chinese Newspapers 2000–2020: Discursive Strategies of Consolidating Hegemony
Mengrong Zhang
University of CologneVolume 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 1 (30) Special Issue 2022
Homeless People as Agents of Self-representation: Exploring the Potential of Enhanced Participation in a Community Newspaper Project
Vojtěch Dvořák
Masaryk UniversityVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
Digital Reputation Management in American Cancer Hospitals. A Proposed Model
Pablo Medina Aguerrebere
Canadian University Dubai Eva Medina
University of Alicante Toni Gonzalez Pacanowski
University of AlicanteVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
Editors' Introduction
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw Anda Rožukalne
Rīga Stradiņš UniversityVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
"Untouched by your Do-gooder Propaganda". How Online User Comments Challenge the Journalistic Framing of the Immigration Crisis
Jana Rosenfeldová
Charles University in Prague Lenka Vochocová
Charles University in PragueChanges in Crisis Management PR and Digital PR Caused by the COVID-19 Pandemic
Dariusz Tworzydło
University of Warsaw, Poland Sławomir Gawroński
University of Information Technology and Management in Rzeszów, Poland Mateusz Lach
Exacto sp. z o.o., Poland Kinga Bajorek
University of Information Technology and Management in Rzeszów, PolandThe Right-Wing Perspective: Populist Frames and Agenda on Facebook in Central and Eastern Europe
Rémi Almodt
Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaEditors’ Introduction
Agnieszka Stępińska
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland Nicoleta Corbu
National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, RomaniaVolume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
EVENT: The 72nd Annual ICA (Virtual) Conference “One World One Network‽”. Paris May 26-30 2022
Agnieszka Stępińska
Adam Mickiewicz University, PoznańVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
Limitations of Fact-Checking on Debunking COVID-19 Misinformation on Facebook: the Case of Faktograf.hr
Mato Brautovic
University of Dubrovnik, Croatia Romana John
University of Dubrovnik, CroatiaVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
METHODS & CONCEPTS: Mediatisation Digitisation and Datafication. The Role of the Social in Contemporary Data Capitalism
Göran Bolin
Södertörn University , SwedenVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
IN MEMORIAM: Professor Michał Drożdż
Iwona Hofman
President of the Polish Communication Association
Maria Curie-Skłodowska UniversityVolume 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
EVENT: The 73rd Conference of the International Communication Association Toronto Canada May 25-29 2023
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw, 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 16 No 1 (33) Spring 2023
BOOK REVIEW: Bernhard Poerksen (2022). Digital Fever. Taming the Big Business of Disinformation. CHAM: Palgrave Macmillan 213 pp. ISBN: 978-3-030-89522-8 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-89522-8.
Denis Halagiera
Adam Mickiewicz University in PoznańMapping the COVID-19 Anti‑Vaccination Communities on Facebook in Czechia
Jaroslava Kaňková
University of Vienna Hajo G. Boomgaarden
University of ViennaEditors' Introduction
Gabriella Szabó
HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest, Hungary Agnieszka Stępińska
Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
Infodemic – “Epidemic of Rumours”. The Characteristic Features of the Phenomenon on the Example of the Infodemic Accompanying COVID-19 in 2020
Anna Miotk
University of WarsawBOOK REVIEW: Göran Bolin & Per Ståhlberg (2023): Managing Meaning in Ukraine: Information Communication and Narration since the Euromaidan Revolution. The MIT Press 166 pp. ISBN: 9780262374576 DOI: 10.7551/mitpress/14147.001.0001
Ivan Valchanov
University of National and World Economy, BulgariaWomen’s Lifestyle Magazine Instagram Profiles. A Comparative Analysis of Polish French and British Publications
Olga Dąbrowska-Cendrowska
Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce, Poland Weronika Sałek
Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce, Poland Natalia Walkowiak
Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce, PolandINTERVIEW: Datafication and Regulation: Today’s Controversies in Publicness and Public Opinion Research. Interview with Professor Slavko Splichal
Gabriella Szabó
HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest, Hungary Slavko Splichal
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Volume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
Transforming Toxic Debates towards European Futures: Technological Disruption Societal Fragmentation and Enlightenment 2.0
Mehmet Ali Üzelgün
University Institute of Lisbon and Nova University Lisbon, Portugal Iliana Giannouli
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Ioanna Archontaki
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Klára Odstrčilová
Charles University, Czech Republic Barbara Thomass
Ruhr University Bochum, Germany Cláudia Álvares
University Institute of Lisbon, PortugalVolume 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
Volume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
EVENT: Roundtable discussion: Perspectives on the Futures of Platforms and Democracy
Miloš Hroch
Charles University, Czech Republic Nico Carpentier
Charles University, Czech Republic Marie Heřmanová
Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Václav Janoščík
Academy of Fine Arts, Czech Republic Dita Malečková
Charles University and Centre for Audiovisual Studies, Czech Republic Martin Tremčinský
Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic