Results of searching entries for keyword: state capture
Propaganda against the West in the Heart of Europe. A masked official state campaign in Hungary
Márton Demeter
KAROLI GASPAR UNIVERSITY OF THE REFORMED CHURCH, HUNGARYRussian TV market: Between state supervision commercial logic and simulacrum of public service
Ilya Kiriya (State University - Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia),
Elena Degtereva (Moscow State University, Russia)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)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)Volume 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 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 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 , SLOVAKIAThe 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)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
Comparing media systems in new democracies: East meets South meets West
Katrin Voltmer
(University of Leeds, Great Britain)INTERVIEW: Media accountability and transparency
Prof. Dr. Stephan Russ-Mohl was interviewed by Michał Głowacki in February 2012.
Public service market? Commercial activities of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK)
Johann Roppen
(Volda University College, Norway)Editor’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)Remixing international news reporting: Towards a renewed confederacy of correspondences
Paulo Nuno Vicente
(UT Austin-Portugal Digital Media Programme)Reduction of liberalism in Lithuanian media policy
Deimantas Jastramskis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)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)Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
The elusive cyber beasts: How to identify the communication of pro-Russian hybrid trolls in Latvia’s internet news sites?
Anda Rožukalne,
Klāvs Sedlenieks
(Riga Stradins University, Latvia)Global de-Westernization trend in media studies and Russian journalism theory
Sergey G. Korkonosenko
(St. Petersburg State University, Russia)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, GERMANYVolume 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 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)The agenda-setting process in international news
Wayne Wanta (Oklahoma State University, USA),
Simona Mikusova (Comenius University in Bratlislava, Slovakia)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)“I went to resist. I’ll be back”: Otekilerin Postasi as an example of citizen journalism in Turkey
Dilek Özhan Koçak
(Giresum University, Turkey)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)Old and new constraints in foreign news coverage in post-communist Ukraine
Natalya Ryabinska
(Ukrainian Catholic Universiyty in Lviv, Ukraine)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
BOOK REVIEW: Sergey Korkonosenko (ed.). (2014). Теории журналистики в России: зарожде- ние и развитие [Journalism Theories in Russia: Genesis and Development]...
Marina Berezhnaia
(St. Petersburg State University, Russia)
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)Russian journalists and social media: updated transitions and new challenges
Elena Johansson and Gunnar Nygren
(Södertörn University, Sweden)Mission (im)possible. The case of Lithuanian Public Service Broadcasting
Žygintas Pečiulis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)Use of sources in newspaper coverage of the 2009 Bulgarian parliamentary election
Daniela V. Dimitrova (Iowa State University, USA),
Petia Kostadinova (University of Illinois Chicago, USA)The role of European political parties in closing the communication gap within the European Union. A critical view
Michał Jacuński
(University of Wrocław, Poland)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)Media pluralism by default: The case of Moldova
John H. Parmelee
(University of North Florida, USA)EU regulatory framework and the political economy of terrestrial digitalisation in Slovakia
Branislav Ondrášik
(Bratislava School of Law, Slovakia)Digital switchover in Hungary. European policies and national circumstances
Márk Lengyel
(Council of Europe)Past present and future of Public Service Broadcasting in Germany
Olexiy Khabyuk
(University of Cologne, Germany)The country of origin principle and competition among national regulatory régimes in East Central Europe
Gábor Polyák and Gergely László Szőke
(University of Pécs, Hungary)Costs of political campaigns in Slovakia
Vladimír Pčolinský
(University of Economics in Bratislava, Slovaka)Advertising in communication of the Catholic Church. The case of Poland
Krzysztof Stępniak
CARDINAL STEFAN WYSZYŃSKI UNIVERSITY IN WARSAW, POLANDAdolescents on YouTube: gender differences regarding the videos they upload and watch
Rebeca Suárez-Álvarez
Rey Juan Carlos University, Spain Antonio García-Jiménez
Rey Juan Carlos University, Spain Manuel Montes-Vozmediano
Rey Juan Carlos University, SpainExploring Visual Culture of COVID-19 Memes: Russian and Chinese Perspectives
Olga V. Smirnova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anna A. Gladkova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Alexandre P. Lobodanov
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Olga V. Sapunova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Galina V. Denissova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anastasia L. Svitich
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia