Document details

Three Decades Later: The Media in South East Europe After 1989

Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS) (2021), iii, 305 pp.

ISBN 978-3-95721-948-0

"The book depicts and reflects the media change by concentrating on five main topics: the development of the media market, the relationship between media and politics, the establishment of public broadcasters, the status of the journalistic profession and the role of digitalisation and the internet. The publication provides a chronological background and outlines the characteristics of the media landscape in each of the ten countries monitored by the KAS Media Programme: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Republic of Moldova, Romania and Serbia. Furthermore, the authors - media experts from the respective countries - address the following key questions, considering the fact that some countries have already joined the European Union: What is the state of the media today? What is their contribution to democracy, how viable are they, what has been achieved? - Important questions for all media experts in the region, but also for everyone who is interested in the media change in South East Europe. “The result is a broad historical overview that impressively documents how differentiated and how fast the change has taken place. It is closely linked to the social transformation process as a whole, which has not yet been completed in any of the countries”, says Hendrik Sittig, Head of the Media Programme South East Europe of the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. "Moreover, it must unfortunately be said that the hope that accession to the European Union would be accompanied by rapid alignment with the other EU countries has not been fulfilled." (https://www.kas.de)
The Media in South East Europe after 1989 / Barbara Thomass, 5
Media and Capitalism in South East Europe: A Grim Landscape / Martin Marinos, 9
Albanian Media in Transformation: Achievements and Challenges / Jonila Godole, 13
Media in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Pluralism and Professionalism Between Political Influences and a Divided Society / Lejla Turcilo, 39
The Bulgarian Media in Three Decades: What Happened and What Didn’t / Orlin Spassov, 69
The Media in Croatia: Deepest Crisis Ever / Stjepan Malovic, 97
Media Landscapes in Kosovo after 1989: Kosovo as a Unique Case of Media Culture in the Balkans / Remzie Shahini-Hoxhaj, 125
The Montenegrin Media Market: Transformation from a Communist to a Mediterranean Media System / Nataša Ružic, 151
Dependent in Independence: Moldovan Media System Swings Between Political Submission and Sustainability / Aneta Gonta, 177
The Media Landscape in North Macedonia in the Decades of Post-Socialist Transition: Changing Times, Persistent Problems / Marina Tuneva, 199
A Century of Struggles for a ‘Free Press’: Media Capture in Romania from National-Communism to Capitalism. Any Way Out? / Adina Marincea, 221
Three Decades Later: From Self-Managed to State-Captured Media in Serbia / Ana Milojevic, 265
Endnotes: What We Learned about the Media in the Region / Nikoleta Daskalova, 291