textAbstract: This dissertation asks: Why do autocrats expand the freedoms enjoyed by their domestic media outlets when it would seem to be against their interests to do so? Some research suggests that private capital investments and other non-state sources of revenue are crucial to expanding the bounds of media discourse. I argue that private money alone cannot produce such developments, instead, increased press freedom can be observed when the economic reforms create the opportunity for a new class of entrepreneurs, interested in funding media ventures, to enter government. From this position they may push for opportunities to expand the media environment. Hosni Mubarak’s presidency in Egypt provides a useful lens to study changes in ...
This study adds to the critical discussion about international media coverage diversity during vario...
In July 2013, a widely celebrated military coup took place in Egypt – only two and a half years afte...
Contradictions in Egyptian media laws, whereby draconian emergency censorship powers coexist with ap...
This thesis investigates the political economy of Egypt’s media system during the neoliberal transit...
This article questions the role of the media in times of political transformation. In doing so, it d...
This study analyzed journalistic standards and management styles at two major government-owned newsp...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt’s business elite and the private pre...
Egypt’s revolutionary uprising raised pressing questions about the kind of journalism that would be ...
While in the case of the Arab Spring the focus of research and debate was very much on the role of s...
The study of the journalist’s relation with political authority in Egypt from 1960 to 2011 seeks to ...
The study of the journalist's relation with political authority in Egypt from 1960 to 2011 seeks to ...
The popular revolution in Egypt has proven that the state-owned media was far from being the public ...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt‟s business elite and the private pre...
textIn 2001, Syria opened its media outlets to private ownership for the first time in over forty ye...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt‟s business elite and the private pre...
This study adds to the critical discussion about international media coverage diversity during vario...
In July 2013, a widely celebrated military coup took place in Egypt – only two and a half years afte...
Contradictions in Egyptian media laws, whereby draconian emergency censorship powers coexist with ap...
This thesis investigates the political economy of Egypt’s media system during the neoliberal transit...
This article questions the role of the media in times of political transformation. In doing so, it d...
This study analyzed journalistic standards and management styles at two major government-owned newsp...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt’s business elite and the private pre...
Egypt’s revolutionary uprising raised pressing questions about the kind of journalism that would be ...
While in the case of the Arab Spring the focus of research and debate was very much on the role of s...
The study of the journalist’s relation with political authority in Egypt from 1960 to 2011 seeks to ...
The study of the journalist's relation with political authority in Egypt from 1960 to 2011 seeks to ...
The popular revolution in Egypt has proven that the state-owned media was far from being the public ...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt‟s business elite and the private pre...
textIn 2001, Syria opened its media outlets to private ownership for the first time in over forty ye...
This article aims at critically analysing the hegemony of Egypt‟s business elite and the private pre...
This study adds to the critical discussion about international media coverage diversity during vario...
In July 2013, a widely celebrated military coup took place in Egypt – only two and a half years afte...
Contradictions in Egyptian media laws, whereby draconian emergency censorship powers coexist with ap...