Public service media and multilevel governance : Citizen participation in the networked society – The Spanish case (2024)

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Technological convergence has forced television networks to reinvent themselves as multiplatform online distribution media, which may lead such networks to question the utility of the public media system and its financing models. At the same time, a global economic crisis caused budget cuts for public service broadcasters, forcing the closure of some of them. First, it was the Greek ERT in June 2013. The same year, in November, a regional Spanish public television was closed as well; this was also due to political decisions. This article presents a study of the reopening of this regional Spanish Public Service Media (PSM) in 2018. This is a singular case in Europe, as it was the first PSM that was conceived from the outset as a convergent media network. The results show many challenges related to political action, which reveal the need for an effective governance system that can provide PSM that are neutral and independentpublic service media, convergence, media ecosystem, public service broadcasting, public television.

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reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk

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The future of public service broadcasting (PSB), and its role for democracy and culture in an age of globalization and digitalization, is a disputed issue among communication scholars, journalists, the general public and politicians. The PSB institutions are dependent on political support for their survival, and they have to live up to cultural policy obligations. The focus of this analysis is on the rhetoric employed in the white papers on PSB and overall cultural policy, produced between 2005 and 2007 in Norway and Sweden. The analysis shows that both countries emphasize the need to secure an inclusive public sphere, a vivid democracy and a national culture. The rhetoric differs in the sense that the Norwegian focus is on PSB as a tool for achieving cultural policy goals, while the Swedish focus is more on why the idea of PSB is important in itself.

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Digital Challenges on the Norwegian Media Scene

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Arne H Krumsvik, Rune Ottosen

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Media Institutions as a Research Field: Three Phases of Norwegian Broadcasting Research (2007)

Trine Syvertsen, Hallvard Moe

"The article discusses the background and origins of research on media institutions as afield, and especially assesses the development and status of Norwegian research on broadcasting institutions. It is demonstrated how the field has developed, both quantitatively and qualitatively, through three key phases: the era of broadcasting monopolies; the“new media situation” in the 1980s and 1990s; and the era of convergence; globalization andcommercialization from the late 1990s. A key purpose is to discuss the theoretical perspectives and implicit and explicit assumptions upon which the research is based. Further, thearticle points to shortcomings and gaps in our knowledge of how media institutions evolve and operate. In closing, it is suggested how the field may maintain its relevance in an erawhere the very concept of a “broadcasting institution” is becoming more blurred.Key Words: media institutions, broadcasting, Norway, research overview"

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The Legitimacy of Public Service Broadcasting in the 21st Century: The Case of Scandinavia

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Challenges and Opportunities for Regional Public Service Media: A Singular Case Study in Europe

Jessica Izquierdo-Castillo

Technological convergence has forced television networks to reinvent themselves as multiplatform online distribution media, which may lead such networks to question the utility of the public media system and its financing models. At the same time, a global economic crisis caused budget cuts for public service broadcasters, forcing the closure of some of them. First, it was the Greek ERT in June 2013. The same year, in November, a regional Spanish public television was closed as well; this was also due to political decisions. This article presents a study of the reopening of this regional Spanish Public Service Media (PSM) in 2018. This is a singular case in Europe, as it was the first PSM that was conceived from the outset as a convergent media network. The results show many challenges related to political action, which reveal the need for an effective governance system that can provide PSM that are neutral and independent.

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Media Institutions as a Research Field: Three Phases of Norwegian Broadcasting Research

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The article discusses the background and origins of research on media institutions as a field, and especially assesses the development and status of Norwegian research on broad- casting institutions. It is demonstrated how the field has developed, both quantitatively and qualitatively, through three key phases: the era of broadcasting monopolies; the “new media situation” in the 1980s and 1990s; and the era of convergence; globalization and commercialization from the late 1990s. A key purpose is to discuss the theoretical perspec- tives and implicit and explicit assumptions upon which the research is based. Further, the article points to shortcomings and gaps in our knowledge of how media institutions evolve and operate. In closing, it is suggested how the field may maintain its relevance in an era where the very concept of a “broadcasting institution” is becoming more blurred.

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It is commonly believed that the Nordic countries, in general, and the Scandinavian coun- tries, in particular, are so much alike that they constitute a common media system - of- ten termed democratic-corporatist. But a review of recent studies on power and democ- racy in Sweden, Norway and Denmark shows that there is most probably no such thing as one

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Comparative analysis between Turkish and Swedish media in the light of Hallin and Mancini's model of media systems

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Public service media and multilevel governance : Citizen participation in the networked society – The Spanish case (2024)
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