This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulgarian post-communist media landscape in relation to media ownership and the origin of media outlets’ capital. The spotlight is on Bulgarian journalists’ perceptions explored in semi-structured interviews with media professionals from the capital city, Sofia. The findings indicate that Bulgarian journalists are strongly interested in, and concerned with, the influence of members of the former nomenklatura and their informal networks on the Bulgarian media landscape and particularly on the way Bulgarian media in Bulgaria have been owned and financed since 1989.U članku se istražuje utjecaj bivše elite komunističke partije (nomenklature) na bugars...
The subject of this article is the issue of journalist-spies in the Bulgarian media before and after...
In this article we map some of the key developments on the Czech print media market following the fa...
The article investigates the connections between trust in journalism and media use. The authors fi nd...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulgar...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulga...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulgar...
In this article we map some of the key developments on the Czech print media market following the fa...
The subject of this article is the issue of journalist-spies in the Bulgarian media before and after...
Abstract: This article situates the dynamics of the mass media transformations in post-totalitarian ...
From a normative standpoint the media are usually seen as one of the pillars of a national integrity...
Twenty-five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Eastern European countries face an increasing t...
The paper examines in a three-folded way the media developments in Bulgaria during the last quarter ...
The media landscape in Bulgaria seems grim at the moment – oversaturated with tabloids and political...
The concentration of media, business and political power in the hands of few oligarchs was targeted ...
Global media system literature is still by and large heavily dominated by the idealistic comparative...
The subject of this article is the issue of journalist-spies in the Bulgarian media before and after...
In this article we map some of the key developments on the Czech print media market following the fa...
The article investigates the connections between trust in journalism and media use. The authors fi nd...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulgar...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulga...
This article discusses the role of the former communist party elite (the nomenklatura) in the Bulgar...
In this article we map some of the key developments on the Czech print media market following the fa...
The subject of this article is the issue of journalist-spies in the Bulgarian media before and after...
Abstract: This article situates the dynamics of the mass media transformations in post-totalitarian ...
From a normative standpoint the media are usually seen as one of the pillars of a national integrity...
Twenty-five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Eastern European countries face an increasing t...
The paper examines in a three-folded way the media developments in Bulgaria during the last quarter ...
The media landscape in Bulgaria seems grim at the moment – oversaturated with tabloids and political...
The concentration of media, business and political power in the hands of few oligarchs was targeted ...
Global media system literature is still by and large heavily dominated by the idealistic comparative...
The subject of this article is the issue of journalist-spies in the Bulgarian media before and after...
In this article we map some of the key developments on the Czech print media market following the fa...
The article investigates the connections between trust in journalism and media use. The authors fi nd...