Titre : | Mapping media accountability - in Europe and beyond | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Tobias Eberwein, Auteur ; Susanne Fengler, Auteur ; Epp Lauk, Auteur ; Tania Leppik-Bork, Auteur | Editeur : | Herbert von Halem | Année de publication : | 2011 | Importance : | 267 p. | Format : | 213 cm | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-3-86962-038-1 | Prix : | 29,-€ | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux
| Tags : | responsabilité des médias journalisme Europe régulation autorégulation | Index. décimale : | 011.37 médias visuels et audiovisuels | Résumé : | Présentation de l'éditeur :
"While press councils face tough challenges across Europe, and media reporting has almost vanished from the mass media in many countries in a time of media crisis, new forms of media accountability have emerged in the Internet: readers and viewers twitter about the media’s mistakes, online ombudsmen follow up on e-mail complaints, and journalists blog about their profession. Can such innovative instruments of media criticism effectively supplement conventional institutions of media self-regulation like press councils, ombudsmen, and media journalism?
"This volume provides pioneer work in analyzing the development of established and emerging media accountability instruments in Eastern and Western Europe as well as two Arab states – among them France, Great Britain, Germany, Romania, Poland, Jordan, and Tunisia. Media scholars and students, professionals and policy-makers alike will be introduced to the specific problems and perspectives of media accountability in different media systems and journalistic cultures. The status quo of media criticism online across Europe will be a key issue and provide insights into the innovative potential of media accountability in the digital age.
Looked at from a comparative point of view, the reports hint at the formation of different cultures of media accountability within Europe and its adjacent countries. These media accountability cultures partly overlap with the journalism cultures identified in the well-known model by Hallin & Mancini who differentiate between North Atlantic or Liberal, Mediterranean or Polarised Pluralist, and Northern European or Democratic Corporatist media systems. At the same time, the development of media accountability and transparency shows distinctive features incongruent with established models of journalism cultures. Consequently, the book also offers new stimuli for innovations in journalism theory."
Source : http://halemverlag.lookingintomedia.com - Consulté le 24/08/2011
| Note de contenu : | CONTENTS
Susanne Fengler, Tobias Eberwein & Tanja Leppik-Bork : Mapping Media Accountability – in Europe and Beyond
Matthias Karmasin, Daniela Kraus, Andy Kaltenbrunner & Klaus Bichler : Austria: A Border-Crosser
Urmas Loit, Epp Lauk & Halliki Harro-Loit : Estonia: Fragmented Accountability
Heikki Heikkilä & Timo Kylmälä: Finland: Direction of Change still Pending
Olivier Baisnée & Ludivine Balland : France: Much Ado about (almost) Nothing?
Tobias Eberwein : Germany: Model without Value?
Gianpiet ro Mazzoleni & Sergio Splendore : Italy: Discovering Media Accountability Culture
George Hawatmeh & Judith Pies : Jordan: Media Accountability under the Patronage of the Regime
Huub Evers & Harmen Groenhart : The Netherlands: Bits of Accountability in a Sea of Freedom
Michał Głowacki & Paweł Urbaniak : Poland: Between Accountability and
Instrumentalization
Mihai Coman, Raluca Radu, Manuela Preoteasa, Mihaela Paun /& Horea Badau : Romania: Twenty Years of Professionalization in Journalism – still Counting
Salvador Alsius, Marcel Mauri, Ruth Rodríguez Martínez : Spain: A Diverse and Asymmetric Landscape
Colin Porlezza & Stephan Russ-Mohl : Switzerland: The Principle of Diversity
Riadh Ferjani : Tunisia: The Clash of Texts and Contexts
Mike Jempson & Wayne Powell : United Kingdom: From the Gentlemen’s Club to the Blogosphere
Epp Lauk & Marcus Denton : Assessing Media Accountability – in Europe and Beyond
References
Contributors
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Mapping media accountability - in Europe and beyond [texte imprimé] / Tobias Eberwein, Auteur ; Susanne Fengler, Auteur ; Epp Lauk, Auteur ; Tania Leppik-Bork, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Herbert von Halem, 2011 . - 267 p. ; 213 cm. ISBN : 978-3-86962-038-1 : 29,-€ Langues : Anglais Catégories : | MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux
| Tags : | responsabilité des médias journalisme Europe régulation autorégulation | Index. décimale : | 011.37 médias visuels et audiovisuels | Résumé : | Présentation de l'éditeur :
"While press councils face tough challenges across Europe, and media reporting has almost vanished from the mass media in many countries in a time of media crisis, new forms of media accountability have emerged in the Internet: readers and viewers twitter about the media’s mistakes, online ombudsmen follow up on e-mail complaints, and journalists blog about their profession. Can such innovative instruments of media criticism effectively supplement conventional institutions of media self-regulation like press councils, ombudsmen, and media journalism?
"This volume provides pioneer work in analyzing the development of established and emerging media accountability instruments in Eastern and Western Europe as well as two Arab states – among them France, Great Britain, Germany, Romania, Poland, Jordan, and Tunisia. Media scholars and students, professionals and policy-makers alike will be introduced to the specific problems and perspectives of media accountability in different media systems and journalistic cultures. The status quo of media criticism online across Europe will be a key issue and provide insights into the innovative potential of media accountability in the digital age.
Looked at from a comparative point of view, the reports hint at the formation of different cultures of media accountability within Europe and its adjacent countries. These media accountability cultures partly overlap with the journalism cultures identified in the well-known model by Hallin & Mancini who differentiate between North Atlantic or Liberal, Mediterranean or Polarised Pluralist, and Northern European or Democratic Corporatist media systems. At the same time, the development of media accountability and transparency shows distinctive features incongruent with established models of journalism cultures. Consequently, the book also offers new stimuli for innovations in journalism theory."
Source : http://halemverlag.lookingintomedia.com - Consulté le 24/08/2011
| Note de contenu : | CONTENTS
Susanne Fengler, Tobias Eberwein & Tanja Leppik-Bork : Mapping Media Accountability – in Europe and Beyond
Matthias Karmasin, Daniela Kraus, Andy Kaltenbrunner & Klaus Bichler : Austria: A Border-Crosser
Urmas Loit, Epp Lauk & Halliki Harro-Loit : Estonia: Fragmented Accountability
Heikki Heikkilä & Timo Kylmälä: Finland: Direction of Change still Pending
Olivier Baisnée & Ludivine Balland : France: Much Ado about (almost) Nothing?
Tobias Eberwein : Germany: Model without Value?
Gianpiet ro Mazzoleni & Sergio Splendore : Italy: Discovering Media Accountability Culture
George Hawatmeh & Judith Pies : Jordan: Media Accountability under the Patronage of the Regime
Huub Evers & Harmen Groenhart : The Netherlands: Bits of Accountability in a Sea of Freedom
Michał Głowacki & Paweł Urbaniak : Poland: Between Accountability and
Instrumentalization
Mihai Coman, Raluca Radu, Manuela Preoteasa, Mihaela Paun /& Horea Badau : Romania: Twenty Years of Professionalization in Journalism – still Counting
Salvador Alsius, Marcel Mauri, Ruth Rodríguez Martínez : Spain: A Diverse and Asymmetric Landscape
Colin Porlezza & Stephan Russ-Mohl : Switzerland: The Principle of Diversity
Riadh Ferjani : Tunisia: The Clash of Texts and Contexts
Mike Jempson & Wayne Powell : United Kingdom: From the Gentlemen’s Club to the Blogosphere
Epp Lauk & Marcus Denton : Assessing Media Accountability – in Europe and Beyond
References
Contributors
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