Document details

The Media in Transitional Democracies

Cambridge; Malden, Mass.: Polity Press (2013), ix, 275 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 233-257, index

Series: Contemporary Political Communication

ISBN 978-0-745644-5

Reviewed in: Global Media and Communication, 2015, vol 11(1) 81-82

Signature commbox: 10-Politics-E 2013

"This book provides an accessible and systematic introduction to the media in transitional democracies. It analyses the problems that occur when transforming the media into independent institutions that are able to inform citizens and hold governments to account. The book covers the following topics: normative conceptions of media and democracy; the role of the past in the transition process; the internet as a new space for democratic change; the persistence of political interference in emerging democracies; the interlocking power of media markets and political ownership; the challenges to journalistic professionalism in post authoritarian contexts; the role of the media in divided societies. The book takes a global view by exploring the interplay of political and media transitions in different pathways of democratization that have taken place in Eastern Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia. It will be of interest to advanced students and scholars who want a better understanding of the media outside established Western democracies. The book will also be of great value to policymakers and activists who are involved in strengthening the media in transitional democracies." (Back cover)
I. WHAT DEMOCRACY - WHAT MEDIA?
1 Democracy and democratisation: one idea, many roads, 13
2 Democratic media: a question of means and ends, 23
II. THE MEDIA AND POLITICAL CHANGE ACROSS TIME AND SPACE
3 Mass media and political change: technological structure and journalistic agency, 55
4 Complex transitions and uncertain outcomes: the media and democratisation over time, 72
5 Emerging media systems and the legacies of the past, 115
III. TRANSFORMING THE MEDIA
6 Media and the state, 133
7 Media markets, 161
8 Political parallelism, 179
9 Journalistic professionalism, 197