Media Pluralism in the Digital Era: Legal, Economic, Social, and Political Lessons Learnt from Europe
Editat de Elda Brogi, Iva Nenadić, Pier Luigi Parcuen Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 sep 2024
Approaching the challenging and ever-changing concept of media pluralism from various complementary and sometimes conflicting angles, combining legal, economic, social, and political perspectives, chapters provide a holistic account of the concept of media pluralism, a key condition for a well-functioning democracy. This book draws on data from the Media Pluralism Monitor project, a scientific tool designed and implemented on a regular basis to document the health of media ecosystems, to provide insights into central dimensions of media systems across the EU and candidate countries. These include:
- the fundamental protection of freedom of expression and safety of journalists and the independence of media authorities;
- market plurality, transparency of ownership, media concentration, media viability, competition enforcement, and digital platforms’ dominance;
- disinformation, media literacy, and digital challenges;
- political independence, conflicts of interest, editorial autonomy, and the independence of public service media;
- social inclusiveness, including access to media and representation of women and community media.
Preț: 901.96 lei
Preț vechi: 991.17 lei
-9% Nou
Puncte Express: 1353
Preț estimativ în valută:
172.62€ • 179.30$ • 143.38£
172.62€ • 179.30$ • 143.38£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 11-25 ianuarie 25
Livrare express 31 decembrie 24 - 04 ianuarie 25 pentru 35.37 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032567617
ISBN-10: 1032567619
Pagini: 234
Ilustrații: 30
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032567619
Pagini: 234
Ilustrații: 30
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate, Professional Reference, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Chapter 1: Monitoring media pluralism in a comparative manner: A holistic and evolving instrument
Elda Brogi, Beata Klimkiewicz and Pier Luigi Parcu
Chapter 2: A decade of digital transformation: Pluralism between the media and digital platforms
Iva Nenadić, Roberta Carlini and Orlin Spassov
Chapter 3: Towards a resilient public sphere: Fighting disinformation and promoting media literacy
Konrad Bleyer-Simon, Ville Manninen, and Auksė Balčytienė
Chapter 4: Threats to Press Freedom and Journalists' Safety: A Comparative Study of Greece, Slovakia, and Spain
Mária Žuffová, Lambrini Papadopoulou, and Jaume Suau Martinez
Chapter 5: Understanding the democratic role of media ownership transparency
Danielle Borges and Christophoros Christophorou
Chapter 6: Sustainability of the European media market(s)
Konrad Bleyer-Simon, Paško Bilić, and Franck Rebillard
Chapter 7: Media viability vs Market plurality: A comparative perspective: The growing tendency towards media ownership concentration in the digital ecosystem
Roberta Carlini, Francisco Rui Cádima, Roderick Flynn, and Jan Christopher Kalbhenn
Chapter 8: Tools and strategies of political capture of the media in Europe
Matteo Trevisan, Václav Štětka, and Marko Milosavljevič
Chapter 9: Evolution of space and geography in media pluralism: A typology of community media in the European Union
Marie Palmer and Josef Seethaler
Chapter 10: Far from gender balance: The persisting underrepresentation of women in the media
Marie Palmer and Marína Urbániková
Chapter 11: Public service media in Latvia, Luxembourg, and Malta: A struggle for independence and relevance in the digital age
Stephanie Lukasik, Raphael Kies, Anda Rožukalne, and Louiselle Vassallo
Chapter 12: The role of alternative news media online for media pluralism in Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia and Turkey
Sofia Verza, Daniela Brkić, Tirse Erbaysal Filibeli, Irina Milutinović, Snežana Trpevska and Kristina Voko
Chapter 13: The future of monitoring and safeguarding media pluralism in Europe
Elda Brogi, Iva Nenadić, Pier Luigi Parcu, and Peggy Valcke
Index
List of Contributors
Chapter 1: Monitoring media pluralism in a comparative manner: A holistic and evolving instrument
Elda Brogi, Beata Klimkiewicz and Pier Luigi Parcu
Chapter 2: A decade of digital transformation: Pluralism between the media and digital platforms
Iva Nenadić, Roberta Carlini and Orlin Spassov
Chapter 3: Towards a resilient public sphere: Fighting disinformation and promoting media literacy
Konrad Bleyer-Simon, Ville Manninen, and Auksė Balčytienė
Chapter 4: Threats to Press Freedom and Journalists' Safety: A Comparative Study of Greece, Slovakia, and Spain
Mária Žuffová, Lambrini Papadopoulou, and Jaume Suau Martinez
Chapter 5: Understanding the democratic role of media ownership transparency
Danielle Borges and Christophoros Christophorou
Chapter 6: Sustainability of the European media market(s)
Konrad Bleyer-Simon, Paško Bilić, and Franck Rebillard
Chapter 7: Media viability vs Market plurality: A comparative perspective: The growing tendency towards media ownership concentration in the digital ecosystem
Roberta Carlini, Francisco Rui Cádima, Roderick Flynn, and Jan Christopher Kalbhenn
Chapter 8: Tools and strategies of political capture of the media in Europe
Matteo Trevisan, Václav Štětka, and Marko Milosavljevič
Chapter 9: Evolution of space and geography in media pluralism: A typology of community media in the European Union
Marie Palmer and Josef Seethaler
Chapter 10: Far from gender balance: The persisting underrepresentation of women in the media
Marie Palmer and Marína Urbániková
Chapter 11: Public service media in Latvia, Luxembourg, and Malta: A struggle for independence and relevance in the digital age
Stephanie Lukasik, Raphael Kies, Anda Rožukalne, and Louiselle Vassallo
Chapter 12: The role of alternative news media online for media pluralism in Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia and Turkey
Sofia Verza, Daniela Brkić, Tirse Erbaysal Filibeli, Irina Milutinović, Snežana Trpevska and Kristina Voko
Chapter 13: The future of monitoring and safeguarding media pluralism in Europe
Elda Brogi, Iva Nenadić, Pier Luigi Parcu, and Peggy Valcke
Index
Notă biografică
Elda Brogi is part-time Professor at the European University Institute and Scientific Coordinator of the EUI’s Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom (CMPF). She has worked at the CMPF since its establishment and initiated and developed the implementation of the Media Pluralism Monitor. Her main interests span constitutional, European, media, and internet law. She holds a PhD in Public Law and Constitutional Law from the University La Sapienza, Rome. She teaches Communication Law at the University of Florence.
Iva Nenadić is Assistant Professor at the University of Zagreb’s Faculty of Political Science and a Research Fellow at the European University Institute’s Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom. She has been a part of the central team for the Media Pluralism Monitor, overseeing methodological improvements and regular implementations since 2016. She specialises in researching the intersection of technology and journalism, media policy and regulation, platform governance, as well as topics like computational propaganda and disinformation.
Pier Luigi Parcu has been part-time Professor at the European University Institute since 2010. He is the founder and the Director of the Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom whose flagship project is the Media Pluralism Monitor. He is also the Director of the Centre for a Digital Society. In the field of media, his research focuses on the democratic and economic challenges associated with digital platforms, as part of his broader interest in innovation dynamics in the digital economy and in emerging technologies.
Iva Nenadić is Assistant Professor at the University of Zagreb’s Faculty of Political Science and a Research Fellow at the European University Institute’s Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom. She has been a part of the central team for the Media Pluralism Monitor, overseeing methodological improvements and regular implementations since 2016. She specialises in researching the intersection of technology and journalism, media policy and regulation, platform governance, as well as topics like computational propaganda and disinformation.
Pier Luigi Parcu has been part-time Professor at the European University Institute since 2010. He is the founder and the Director of the Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom whose flagship project is the Media Pluralism Monitor. He is also the Director of the Centre for a Digital Society. In the field of media, his research focuses on the democratic and economic challenges associated with digital platforms, as part of his broader interest in innovation dynamics in the digital economy and in emerging technologies.
Descriere
Bringing together scholars, journalists, and researchers from 27 European countries, this book provides a comparative and longitudinal analysis of the evolvement of conditions and standards relevant for sustainable, free, and plural media and journalism in Europe in the last 10 years.