In the twentieth century, the media gave whistleblowers a voice, spearheaded the downfall of powerful politicians, and exposed widespread corporate corruption. How will the twenty-first-century media cope with its storied legacy as the watchdog of democratic society? Reclaiming the Media examines the sometimes tenuous, often fraught relationship between media organizations and civil rights in Europe. In sections devoted to citizenship, participation, contemporary journalism, and activist communication strategies, a panel of European media experts makes the case for deepening the media’s role in democracy.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Peter Dahlgren
Introduction
Introduction
Bart Cammaerts and Nico Carpentier
Reclaiming the media: communication rights and expanding democratic media roles
Section One: Citizenship, the Public Sphere, and Media by Bart Cammaerts
Chapter One
Making a difference to media pluralism: a critique of the pluralistic consensus
in European media policy
Reclaiming the media: communication rights and expanding democratic media roles
Section One: Citizenship, the Public Sphere, and Media by Bart Cammaerts
Chapter One
Making a difference to media pluralism: a critique of the pluralistic consensus
in European media policy
Kari Karppinen
Chapter Two
Communication and (e)democracy: assessing European e-democracy discourses
Arjuna Tuzzi,Claudia Padovani, and Giorgia Nesti
Chapter Three
Reducing communicative inequalities towards a pedagogy for inclusion
Margit Böck
Section Two: Participation and Media by Nico Carpentier
Chapter Four
Citizen participation and local public spheres:an agency and identity focussed approach to the Tampere postal services conflict
Auli Harju
Chapter Five
Towards fair participation: recruitment strategies in Demostation
Egil G. Skogseth
Appendix: the five programmes
Chapter Six
Representation and inclusion in the online debate: the issue of honor killings
Tamara Witschge
Section Three: Journalism, Media, and Democracy by Nico Carpentier
Chapter Seven
Coping with the agoraphobic media professional: a typology of journalistic practices reinforcing democracy and participation
Nico Carpentier
Chapter Eight
Chapter Eight
Disobedient media – unruly citizens: governmental communication in crisis
Hannu Nieminen
Chapter Nine
On the dark side of democracy: the global imaginary of financial journalism
Anu Kantola
Section Four: Activism and Media by Bart Cammaerts
Chapter Ten
Contesting global capital, new media, solidarity, and the role of a social imaginary
Natalie Fenton
Chapter Eleven
Civil Society Media at the WSIS: a new actor in global communication governance?
Chapter Twelve
Media and communication strategies of glocalized activists: beyond media-centric thinking
Notes on the Contributors
Arne Hintz
Chapter Twelve
Media and communication strategies of glocalized activists: beyond media-centric thinking
Bart Cammaerts
Notes on the Contributors