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MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit 8
Donnerstag 19. Mai 2022, von
Getting prepared for the exam... you have to read at least this publication:
- Comparing Media Systems: Three Models of Media and Politics (2004), by Daniel C. Hallin and Paolo Mancini
Here is an access to the first 40 pages provided by Google Books
And here is even more:
– Brüggemann, Michael; Engesser, Sven; Büchel, Florin; Humprecht, Edda; Castro, Laia (2014): Hallin and Mancini Revisited. Four Empirical Types of Western Media Systems. In Journal of Communication 64 (6), pp. 1037–1065. Available online at https://doi.org/10.1111/jcom.12127.
– Daniel C. Hallin & Paolo Mancini (2017) Ten Years After Comparing Media Systems: What Have We Learned?, Political Communication, 34:2, 155-171, Published online: 31 Oct 2016
DOI: 10.1080/10584609.2016.1233158 [1]
– Paolo Mancini: Comparing Media Systems and the Digital Age
International Journal of Communication 14(2020), 5761–5774 1932–8036/20200005
Here is a summary of the scripts published so far:
– Onboarding ME&MP MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics
– ME&MP "Take Off" MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit1
– MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit2
– MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit3
– MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit4
– MediaEconomics & MediaPolitics Unit5
[1]
Abstract
In this article we review research published since the publication of Comparing Media Systems which seeks to operationalize concepts discussed in that work and to test the framework proposed there or to put forward alternatives or revisions. We focus on works that deal with the original 18 countries covered in Comparing Media Systems, and consider the progress made in developing quantitative measures across these cases for key variables, research testing the grouping of cases in Comparing Media Systems, research extending the comparative analysis of Western media systems to new media, and research on convergence toward the Liberal Model. In the final section, we focus on limitations of the research produced during the 10 years following the publication of Comparing Media Systems, particularly the heavy emphasis on quantitative operationalization, and some of the difficulties in using quantitative analysis to investigate complex, dynamic systems.