Results of searching entries for keyword: television
Volume 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, TurkeyPolitical discourse on Polish commercial television. Case of “Fakty” TVN
Dorota Piontek
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)BOOK REVIEW: Michał Kuś (2013) Telewizja publiczna w Hiszpanii. Pomiędzy polityką i rynkiem (Public television in Spain: Between politics and the market)...
Magdalena Parus
(AGH University of Science and Technology in Kraków, Poland)Journalists and politicians in television interviews after elections: A redefinition of roles?
Dorota Piontek and Bartosz Hordecki
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)Television: the challenges of pluralism to media regulation
Lilia Raycheva
(Sofia University St. Kliment Okhridski, Bulgaria)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)Public Service Media Fee to substitute Television Fee in Finland?
Taisto Hujanen
(University of Tampere, Finland)The worlds of “the others”? Czech television’s agenda of world news coverage
Tomáš Trampota and Kateřina Kučerová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)BOOK 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, PolandThe tabloidization of political discourse: The Polish case
Dorota Piontek
(Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland)Russian 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)Danish Public Service Broadcasting in transition: From monopoly to a digital media environment – a shift in paradigms
Poul Erik Nielsen
(University of a Aarhus, Denmark)Political advertising - a research overview
Christina Holtz-Bacha
FRIEDRICH-ALEX ANDER -UNIVERSITÄT ERL ANGEN-NÜRNBERG, GERMANYMedia 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)Media pluralism policy in a post-socialist Mediterranean media system: The case of Croatia
Zrinjka Peruško
(University of Zagreb, Croatia)Mission (im)possible. The case of Lithuanian Public Service Broadcasting
Žygintas Pečiulis
(Vilnius University, Lithuania)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 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, EstoniaAgency awakening and the audiovisual: Developments in late-Soviet Latvian Broadcasting
Sergei Kruk (Rīga Stradiņš University, Latvia),
Janis Chakars (University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA)Audiovisual political advertising in communication strategies of Polish political parties: The case of the parliamentary campaign in 2011
Małgorzata Adamik-Szysiak
(Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, Poland)30-second politics 30 years too late: Political TV advertising in Swedish election campaigns 2006–2018
Marie Grusell
UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN Lars Nord
MID SWEDEN UNIVERSITY, SWEDENVolume 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)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 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Nonverbal components of the populist style of political communication: A study on televised presidential debates in Poland
Dorota Piontek
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY, POZNAŃ , POLAND Małgorzata Tadeusz-Ciesielczyk
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY, POZNAŃ , POLANDPublic frames for Public Service Broadcasting in Sweden
Christina Jutterström
(Former Director General of Sveriges Television (SVT), Sweden)Volume 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 , POLANDVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Cultural Citizenship Popular Culture and Gender: Examining Audience Understandings of The Handmaid’s Tale in Hungary
Agnes Strickland-Pajtok
Eszterházy Károly University, HungaryVolume 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 RepublicThe 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, Poland