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Central European Journal of Communication

Central European Journal of Communication

Scientific Journal of the Polish Communication Association

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You are here: Home > Browse Journal > Volume 17 No 3 (37) Spring 2024 > Broadcasting a Nuclear Accident: Chernobyl on the Hungarian Radio

Broadcasting a Nuclear Accident: Chernobyl on the Hungarian Radio

Dalma Boldog
Department of Communication, Budapest Business School University of Applied Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

ABSTRACT: On April 26, 1986 a major nuclear accident occurred in the Soviet Union: Reactor No. 4 of the Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Nuclear Power Plant exploded and harmful radioactive fall-out effused. The disaster threatened most of the population of Europe who, however, could not access timely and appropriate information about the health risks, as most of the media outlets were under close authoritarian political control in throughout the countries of the Eastern Bloc. Based on an analysis of archival radio news and of political communiques, this paper describes how the Hungarian party leadership managed the communication of this crisis domestically and discusses what information, and when, was aired on Hungarian Radio (HR). Using mixed research methods, the paper reveals the impacts of loosening political control over a Soviet-type media system in the last decade of the 20th century. The paper also provides an insight into daily practices of political and editorial decision making in a communist regime in times of crisis, which is a currently understudied research field.

Full text: https://journals.ptks.pl/cejc/article/view/612/pdf

DOI: 10.51480/1899-5101.17.3(37).612

KEYWORDS: Chernobyl disaster, crisis, Hungarian Radio, information policy, Soviet communist media system

AUTHOR:

  • Dalma Boldog
    ORCID: 0000-0002-0282-4818
    Department of Communication, Budapest Business School University of Applied Sciences, Budapest, Hungary