Viral false information, siloed information habits, and growing distrust in the media are amongst today’s most alarming challenges to digital media markets. These phenomena impact trust in media at all societal levels – global, regional, national, and local. They are enabled by economic, sociocultural, and technological transformations that have destabilised media systems and involve commercial, governmental, and civic stakeholders. The consequences significantly impact the lives of ordinary citizens. In today’s context, the ability of public service media organisations to fulfill a mandated universalism mission and counter these trends requires a new approach that prioritises and operationalises collaborative efforts.Go to the full book to...
The public’s capacity to create, distribute, and selectively consume information presents non-govern...
This contributed volume identifies how the information processes of public institutions and citizens...
It has long been noticed that the problem of public information provision has shifted from collectin...
This book presents the collectively authored Public Service Media and Public Service Internet Manife...
In this chapter, I address a complex relationship in linking the principles of universalism and pers...
The basic purpose of this paper is to describe information as the most valuable currency of postmode...
About the book: Featuring specially commissioned chapters from experts in the field of media and c...
The RIPE Reader series is ten years old. It's the publishing element of the ten year RIPE initiative...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved. This book is the first general social analysis that se...
In this chapter we outline three key challenges that Public Service Media (PSM) organisations and na...
This chapter reviews a range of the organisational structures necessary to deliver datafied, fully n...
The circulation of misinformation is nothing new; it has been around for centuries in the form of in...
Public service media are going through dramatic transformations as a result of technological develop...
While the reason for the existence of Public Media was not in dispute to most Europeans for many yea...
Olivier Arifon, associate professor in communication, FARE Unit research, Strasbourg UniversityIt’s ...
The public’s capacity to create, distribute, and selectively consume information presents non-govern...
This contributed volume identifies how the information processes of public institutions and citizens...
It has long been noticed that the problem of public information provision has shifted from collectin...
This book presents the collectively authored Public Service Media and Public Service Internet Manife...
In this chapter, I address a complex relationship in linking the principles of universalism and pers...
The basic purpose of this paper is to describe information as the most valuable currency of postmode...
About the book: Featuring specially commissioned chapters from experts in the field of media and c...
The RIPE Reader series is ten years old. It's the publishing element of the ten year RIPE initiative...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved. This book is the first general social analysis that se...
In this chapter we outline three key challenges that Public Service Media (PSM) organisations and na...
This chapter reviews a range of the organisational structures necessary to deliver datafied, fully n...
The circulation of misinformation is nothing new; it has been around for centuries in the form of in...
Public service media are going through dramatic transformations as a result of technological develop...
While the reason for the existence of Public Media was not in dispute to most Europeans for many yea...
Olivier Arifon, associate professor in communication, FARE Unit research, Strasbourg UniversityIt’s ...
The public’s capacity to create, distribute, and selectively consume information presents non-govern...
This contributed volume identifies how the information processes of public institutions and citizens...
It has long been noticed that the problem of public information provision has shifted from collectin...