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European Union News Th Case Study: Europa FM Uropean Union News
Interdisciplinary Dimensions of Communication Science Interdisciplinary Dimensions of Communication Science European Union News Themes in Romanian Radio Stations. Case Study: Europa FM and Radio Romania Actualitati Antonia-Ioana Matei1, Florica Iuhaş2 Abstract: With Romania’s integration in the European Union, the media content related to the member states has acquired growing importance. The themes of journalism were enriched with new approaches towards national image in the European context and vice versa. At a first level, the study aims to conduct a quantitative analysis on the news topics broadcasted by Radio Romania Actualitati and Europa FM, for the duration of 32 days. The qualitative component focuses on the topics addressed in radio news in order to see what is the media content which reflects the image of the European Union. The findings show, beyond the numbers, that the editorial policy of the Romanian media is not concerned with the interests of the citizens - from the perspective of common themes - but rather with how can the EU, as a unified body, help member countries solve their problems. Keywords: European Union; editorial policy; Romanian media 1. Introduction On the canvas of media discourse in post-revolution Romania, many topics have occurred, aimed on the one hand at the image of Romania in the context of its pre-accession to the EU, on the other, at its new European identity. In the past three years, the reality of joining the EU brought a common approach from all member states which intend – each one - to make meaningful analysis of all dimensions covering the European Community. -
1 Decizia Nr. 63 Din 30.10.2012 Referitoare La Plângerea Înaintată De Către SC RCS&RDS SA Împotriva SC Antena TV Group
Decizia nr. 63 din 30.10.2012 referitoare la plângerea înaintată de către SC RCS&RDS SA împotriva SC Antena TV Group SA Consiliul Concurenţei În baza: 1. Decretului Preşedintelui României nr. 700/27.04.2009 pentru numirea Preşedintelui Consiliului Concurenţei, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. 284 din 30 aprilie 2009; 2. Decretului Preşedintelui României nr. 973/19.12.2011 privind numirea unui Vicepreşedinte al Consiliului Concurenţei, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. 901 din 20 decembrie 2011; 3. Decretului Preşedintelui României nr. 703/27.04.2009 pentru numirea unui membru al Consiliului Concurenţei, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, partea I, nr. 284 din 30 aprilie 2009 4. Decretului Preşedintelui României nr. 974/19.12.2011 pentru numirea unui membru al Consiliului Concurenţei, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. 901 din 20 decembrie 2011; 5. Legii concurenţei nr. 21/1996, republicată, cu modificările şi completările ulterioare, publicată în Monitorul Oficial al României, partea I, nr. 742 din 16 august 2005 (numită în continuare Legea concurenţei); 6. Regulamentului de organizare, funcţionare şi procedură al Consiliului Concurenţei, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. 113 din 14 februarie 2012 ; 7. Regulamentului privind analiza şi soluţionarea plângerilor referitoare la încălcarea prevederilor art. 5, 6 şi 9 din Legea concurenţei nr. 21/1996 şi a prevederilor art. 101 şi 102 din Tratatul privind funcţionarea Uniunii Europene, publicat în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. 687 din data de 12 octombrie 2011, cu modificările şi completările ulterioare; 8. Instrucţiunilor privind definirea pieţei relevante, publicate în Monitorul Oficial al României, Partea I, nr. -
Media Influence Matrix Romania
N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 9 MEDIA INFLUENCE MATRIX: ROMANIA Author: Dumitrita Holdis Editor: Marius Dragomir Published by CEU Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS), Budapest, 2019 About CMDS About the authors The Center for Media, Data and Society Dumitrita Holdis works as a researcher for the (CMDS) is a research center for the study of Center for Media, Data and Society at CEU. media, communication, and information Previously she has been co-managing the “Sound policy and its impact on society and Relations” project, while teaching courses and practice. Founded in 2004 as the Center for conducting research on academic podcasting. Media and Communication Studies, CMDS She has done research also on media is part of Central European University’s representation, migration, and labour School of Public Policy and serves as a focal integration. She holds a BA in Sociology from point for an international network of the Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca and a acclaimed scholars, research institutions and activists. MA degree in Sociology and Social Anthropology from the Central European University. She also has professional background in project management and administration. She CMDS ADVISORY BOARD has worked and lived in Romania, Hungary, France and Turkey. Clara-Luz Álvarez Floriana Fossato Ellen Hume Monroe Price Marius Dragomir is the Director of the Center Anya Schiffrin for Media, Data and Society. He previously Stefaan G. Verhulst worked for the Open Society Foundations (OSF) for over a decade. Since 2007, he has managed the research and policy portfolio of the Program on Independent Journalism (PIJ), formerly the Network Media Program (NMP), in London. -
Funding Journalism
M A Y 2 0 1 9 Media Influence Matrix: Romania Funding Journalism Author: Dumitrita Holdis Editor: Marius Dragomir Published by CEU Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS), Budapest, 2019 About CMDS About the Authors The Center for Media, Data and Society Dumitrita Holdis works as a researcher (CMDS) is a research center for the study for Center for Media, Data and Society. of media, communication, and Previously she has been co-managing the information policy and its impact on “Sound Relations” project, while teaching society and practice. Founded in 2004 as courses and conducting research on the Center for Media and Communication academic podcasting. She has done Studies, CMDS is part of CEU’s School of research also on media representation, Public Policy and serves as a focal point migration, and labour integration. She for an international network of acclaimed holds a BA in Sociology from the Babes- scholars, research institutions and Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca and a MA activists. degree in Sociology and Social Anthropology from the Central European University. She also has professional background in project management and CMDS ADVISORY BOARD administration. She has worked and lived in Romania, Hungary, France and Turkey. Clara-Luz Alvarez Floriana Fossato Marius Dragomir is the Director of the Ellen Hume Center for Media, Data and Society. He Monroe Price previously worked for the Open Society Anya Schiffrin Foundations (OSF) for over a decade. Stefaan G. Verhulst Since 2007, he has managed the research and policy portfolio of the Program on Independent Journalism (PIJ), formerly the Network Media Program (NMP), in ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS London. -
Contents NO. 2
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TRANSFORMATION STUDIES 2013 Vol. 1, No. 2 © by Europe Our House, Tbilisi e-ISSN 2298-0997 Editor-in-Chief Tamar Gamkrelidze Europe Our House , Tbilisi (Georgia ) [email protected] Co-editors Dr. Arkadiusz Modrzejewski Dr. Tatiana Tökölyová University of Gdansk (Poland ) University College of International and Public [email protected] Affairs in Prague (the Czech republic), Educa- tion and Consultation Institute in Bratislava (Slovakia) Prof. Jakub Potulski [email protected] University of Gdansk (Poland ) [email protected] EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Dr. Arkadiusz Modrzejewski , University of Gdansk, Poland – Chairperson Prof. Marwan Al-Absi , University of Constantine the Philosopher in Nitra, Slovakia Prof. Slavomír Gálik , University of ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava, Slovakia Prof. Stefan Ewertowski, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland Prof. Wojciech Forysinski , Eastern Mediterranean University, Famangusta, Northern Cyprus Prof. Branislav Fridrich , Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia Prof. Danuta Karnowska, Nicola Copernicus University in Torun, Poland Prof. Anatoliy Kruglashov , Chernivtsi National University, Ukraine Prof. Malkhaz Matsaberidze , Ivane Javakashvili Tbilisi State University Prof. Ruizan Mekvabidze , Gori State Teaching University, Georgia Dr. Lucia Mokrá, Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia Dr. Antoni Momoc , University of Bucharest, Romania Prof. Tatiana Papiashvili , Black See University in Tbilisi, Georgia Prof. Tereza-Brînduşa Palade -
TV News Channels in Europe: Offer, Establishment and Ownership European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, 2018
TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, 2018 Director of publication Susanne Nikoltchev, Executive Director Editorial supervision Gilles Fontaine, Head of Department for Market Information Author Laura Ene, Analyst European Television and On-demand Audiovisual Market European Audiovisual Observatory Proofreading Anthony A. Mills Translations Sonja Schmidt, Marco Polo Sarl Press and Public Relations – Alison Hindhaugh, [email protected] European Audiovisual Observatory Publisher European Audiovisual Observatory 76 Allée de la Robertsau, 67000 Strasbourg, France Tel.: +33 (0)3 90 21 60 00 Fax. : +33 (0)3 90 21 60 19 [email protected] http://www.obs.coe.int Cover layout – ALTRAN, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France Please quote this publication as Ene L., TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership, European Audiovisual Observatory, Strasbourg, 2018 © European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, July 2018 If you wish to reproduce tables or graphs contained in this publication please contact the European Audiovisual Observatory for prior approval. Opinions expressed in this publication are personal and do not necessarily represent the view of the European Audiovisual Observatory, its members or the Council of Europe. TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership Laura Ene Table of contents 1. Key findings ...................................................................................................................... -
Not to Be Missed at TIFF 2013: What's up Doc & Focus
Not to be Missed at TIFF 2013: What’s Up Doc & Focus Touching stories, exciting portraits and original visions – all of this and more in two of the traditional sections of Transilvania International Film Festival (May 31 – June 9, Cluj): What's Up Doc? and Focus. The "What’s Up Doc?" section presented by HBO, encompasses 15 films, some of them already internationally acclaimed, others selected by the curator of this section, Ana-Maria Sandu, out of more than 100 submissions. Unanimously praised by the critics and recipient of the Oscar for "Best Documentary", Searching for Sugar Man (by Malik Bendjelloul) is the absolute must-see of this edition. The film tells the touching story of musician Sixto Rodriguez who, without even knowing it, inspired a whole generation. An amazing story has to tell Dreams of a Life (by Carol Morley), the reconstruction of the life of a young woman who died without anyone noticing it: alone on the couch, surrounded by unopened Christmas presents and with her TV turned on. Her body was discovered three years later. And Fuck for Forest (by Michal Marczak) takes us in the notorious world of the first eco-porno ONG, an institution that raises money for the tropical forest by selling pornography. TIFF audiences will enjoy complex portraits such as A World Not Ours (by Mahdi Fleifel), the personal journal of the director about the Palestinian refugee camp Ain el-Helweh from Liban, where he was brought up, the multi-awarded Hit So Hard (by P. David Ebersole), a rockumentary about the thrilling life of Patty Schemel, the drummer of Hole, Courtney Love's band, Liv & Ingmar (by Dheeraj Akolkar), telling the love and friendship story of director Ingmar Bergman and actress Liv Ullman or Pablo (by Richard Goldgewicht), a film as ingenious as its protagonist, the "famed nobody" Pablo Ferro, the eccentric artist called by Stanley Kubrick "the father of the 60s style and of the MTV esthetics". -
Poland, the Czech Republic, Russia, Mauritius, Seychelles, and in Newsrooms Across the United States
Caught in the Middle: Central and Eastern European Journalism at a Crossroads A Report to the Center for International Media Assistance By Ellen Hume January 20, 2011 The Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA), a project of the National Endowment for Democracy, aims to strengthen the support, raise the visibility, and improve the e!ectiveness of media assistance programs by providing information, building networks, conducting research, and highlighting the indispensable role independent media play in the creation and development of sustainable democracies around the world. An im- portant aspect of CIMA’s work is to research ways to attract additional U.S. private sector interest in and support for international media development. CIMA convenes working groups, discussions, and panels on a variety of topics in the "eld of media development and assistance. The center also issues reports and recommendations based on working group discussions and other investigations. These reports aim to provide policymakers, as well as donors and practitioners, with ideas for bolstering the e!ectiveness of media assistance. Marguerite H. Sullivan Senior Director Center for International Media Assistance National Endowment for Democracy 1025 F Street, N.W., 8th Floor Washington, D.C. 20004 Phone: (202) 378-9700 Fax: (202) 378-9407 Email: [email protected] URL: http://cima.ned.org About the Author Ellen Hume Ellen Hume is currently an Annenberg Fellow in Civic Media at Central European University in Budapest where in 2010 she taught in the political science department. From 2007-2009 she was research director of the Center for Future Civic Media at the MIT Media Lab. -
Drama Directory 2014
2014 UPDATE CONTENTS Acknowlegements ..................................................... 2 Latvia .......................................................................... 122 Introduction ................................................................. 3 Lithuania ................................................................... 125 Luxembourg ............................................................ 131 Austria .......................................................................... 4 Malta .......................................................................... 133 Belgium ...................................................................... 10 Netherlands ............................................................. 135 Bulgaria ....................................................................... 21 Norway ..................................................................... 145 Cyprus ......................................................................... 26 Poland ........................................................................ 151 Czech Republic ......................................................... 31 Portugal .................................................................... 157 Denmark .................................................................... 36 Romania ................................................................... 160 Estonia ........................................................................ 42 Slovakia ................................................................... -
International Conference KNOWLEDGE-BASED ORGANIZATION Vol
International Conference KNOWLEDGE-BASED ORGANIZATION Vol. XXIII No 2 2017 MASS-MEDIA COMMUNICATION IN ROMANIA Ioana-Narcisa CREȚU “Lucian Blaga” University of Sibiu, Romania [email protected] Abstract: Over 1200 new publications have appeared in Romania since the fall of communism. Some of them don’t exist anymore, but there always appear new ones. The Romanian newspaper market comprises about 1500 publications most of which appear on a weekly basis and 200 daily newspapers. Television is the most familiar source of information. The radio landscape has changed considerably - similar to the television - since 1990. Besides the public broadcaster offering several programs, there are over 150 private local radio stations and various other channels. Despite the diversity of the Romanian press, we cannot yet speak of a completely free press (see the report of the Freedom House organization). The limitations of media freedom and freedom of speech are related to media ownership, but also with gaps in the national legislation. This study aims to contribute to the advancement in the conceptualization of qualitative journalism by proposing to analyze different situations of failure in investigative journalism and identifying factors that conduct to limitation of media freedom. Keywords: freedom of the press, media landscape, Romania, qualitative journalism 1. Introduction impact of the media ownership (case 1 and 2) The limitations of media freedom and and quality journalism (case 3) in Romania. freedom of speech despite of pluralism of the press in former communist countries in 2. National Media Landscape Southeast of Europe, especially in Romania 2.1. Printed press and Moldavia, are related to media Over 1200 new publications have appeared in ownership as in [1], mentioned by Active Romania since the fall of communism. -
Mediafreedom in Romania 2 0
FRE E E X R E P O R T M E D I A FREEDOM I N R O M A N I A 2014 - 2015 - Member of the Reporters without Borders Network - And IFEX 2014 Methodology ..................................................................................................................................................................... 7 General context................................................................................................................................................................. 8 Ethics In The Mass-Media. Abandoning Media Mission ................................................................................................. 13 Corrupt Media Financing Mechanisms ........................................................................................................................... 13 Constanța local barons, accused of using the press for corruption purposes ............................. 14 Mayor Marian Vanghelie, OTV and B1 TV advertising contract agent ...................................... 15 Party trolls paid with bribe money .............................................................................. 15 Dan Voiculescu and Intact Media – a new criminal investigation for blackmail ........................... 15 POLITICAL PROPAGANDA ................................................................................................................................................ 16 Political instrumentalization of the protests by the political party televisions .......................... 16 Antena 3 fights against the Conservative -
The Freedom of Mass Media Within the EU - the Political Construction Considered the Flagship of Democracy
Master programme in Film and Media Producing The freedom of mass media within the EU - the political construction considered the flagship of democracy Florentin Catalin Stoica [email protected] Abstract: The European Union has a special place in the popular culture when talking about democracy. The mass media represent “the watch dog of democracy”, therefore it is hard to imagine a real democracy without free mass media. Even though this freedom is guaranteed by the EU legislation, it is sometimes constrained in supposed democratic countries. The study aims to find if is possible to constrain the freedom of mass media in a EU country, thus democratic country. If so, what could be the mechanism used in constraining this freedom? What reactions do the other EU members have? Key words: Mass media, freedom, democracy, politics, European Union, manipulation, power, double standard FMPM06 Master thesis (30 credits ECTS) August 2013 Supervisor: Erik Hedling Website www.sol.lu.se Table of contents 1. Introduction --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 2. The objectives of the study --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 3. Theoretical considerations and previous research ---------------------------------------- 5 3.1. Definitions ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 3.2. Theories regarding mass media as mass communication ---------------------------------- 9 3.3. The forth estate --------------------------------------------------------------------------------