Introduced by Daniel C. Hallin and Paolo Mancini, the book takes stock of twenty years of exiting transformation of east European media systems after the collapse of communism in 1989—an explicit, comparative, academic discussion of media politics.Leading researchers from different regions of Europe and the United States address five major interrelated themes:1) how ideological and normative constructs gave way to empirical systematic comparative work in media research
2) the role of foreign media groups in post-communist regions and the effects of ownership in terms of impacts on media freedom
3) the various dimensions of the relationship between mass media and political systems in a comparative perspective
4) professionalization of journalism in different political cultures—autonomy of journalists, professional norms and practices, political instrumentalization and the commercialization of the media
5) the role of state intervention in media systems
Language
English
Pages
304
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Central European University Press
Release
March 01, 2010
ISBN
9639776548
ISBN 13
9789639776548
Comparative Media Systems: European and Global Perspectives
Introduced by Daniel C. Hallin and Paolo Mancini, the book takes stock of twenty years of exiting transformation of east European media systems after the collapse of communism in 1989—an explicit, comparative, academic discussion of media politics.Leading researchers from different regions of Europe and the United States address five major interrelated themes:1) how ideological and normative constructs gave way to empirical systematic comparative work in media research
2) the role of foreign media groups in post-communist regions and the effects of ownership in terms of impacts on media freedom
3) the various dimensions of the relationship between mass media and political systems in a comparative perspective
4) professionalization of journalism in different political cultures—autonomy of journalists, professional norms and practices, political instrumentalization and the commercialization of the media
5) the role of state intervention in media systems