Die Studienreihe "Media-Analyse" ist eine jährlich durchgeführte, systematische Erhebung des Nutzungsverhaltens von Medien innerhalb der deutschen Bevölkerung. Träger der "Media-Analyse" ist die "Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Media-Analyse (AGMA)", in der alle wesentlichen Publikumsmedien, Werbeagenturen sowie verschiedene werbetreibende Unternehmen zusammengeschlossen sind. Dabei wird jährlich eine Zufallsstichprobe in einem persönlichen Interview zu ihrer Mediennutzung befragt. Im Fokus der vorliegenden Studie aus dem Jahr 1997 liegt der Konsum von Pressemedien.
Die Studienreihe "Media-Analyse" ist eine jährlich durchgeführte, systematische Erhebung des Nutzungsverhaltens von Medien innerhalb der deutschen Bevölkerung. Träger der "Media-Analyse" ist die "Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Media-Analyse (AGMA)", in der alle wesentlichen Publikumsmedien, Werbeagenturen sowie verschiedene werbetreibende Unternehmen zusammengeschlossen sind. Dabei wird jährlich eine Zufallsstichprobe in einem persönlichen Interview zu ihrer Mediennutzung befragt. Im Fokus der vorliegenden Studie aus dem Jahr 1996 liegt der Konsum von Pressemedien.
A media system does not exist in a vacuum. It develops and grows within social, political and economic systems. They interact with and influence one another, as well as stimulate each other's development. The main subject of this work is the dynamically evolving Polish media system, which is under the influence of institutions and external stakeholders. Thanks to this, it is easier to understand that the "crossroads" is not only a problem of the Polish media system, but a global one. For this reason, a comparative perspective is employed. Three chapters help to provide an answer to research questions dedicated to political parallelism and journalistic professionalization. The analysis would be limited and unrepresentative if the book enclosed it with one country's border, omitting the broad global, European and Centro-European context.
Europe´s Future Is Digital -- The Digital Single Market -- The AVMSD REFIT and Review -- Copyright -- Digital Education -- Research and Media Convergence -- Media Freedom and Pluralism -- Conclusions -- Digital Sovereignty -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1: Introduction: Digital Transformation in a Global World -- Part I: Change Drivers -- 2: Idea and Politics of Communication in the Global Age -- 2.1 Idea and Reality of Communication -- 2.2 The Virtual Crowd as Political Factor -- 2.3 Conclusion: A Communication Order for the Twenty-First Century? -- 3: Making Media Management Research Matter -- 3.1 Industry Change -- 3.2 Defining Media Management -- 3.3 Why Is Media Management so Difficult? -- 3.4 Is Social Media the Game Changer? -- 3.5 Social Media, Alternatives to Commercial? -- 3.6 Finally, Does It Need a New Paradigm? -- References -- Part II: Media Innovation and Convergence -- 4: Is There a Need for a Convention to Supervising Digital Information? -- 5: Enlarging Participatory Communicative Spaces on Adolescents Sexual and Reproductive Health in Nigeria: A Look at New Media ... -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Conceptual Clarification -- 5.3 Adolescents -- 5.4 Reproductive and Sexual Health -- 5.5 Participatory Communication -- 5.6 A Look at the Reproductive Health Status of Nigerian Adolescents -- 5.7 Consequences of Unsafe Sexual Activity Among Nigerian Adolescents -- 5.8 Factors Influencing Adolescents Sexual Activity -- 5.9 Nigerian Media, Development Agencies and Reproductive Health Communication -- 5.10 New Media Technologies and Adolescents Sexual and Reproductive Health Communication -- 5.11 Engaging New Media Technologies in Enlarging Participatory Communicative Spaces on Adolescents Sexual and Reproductive He... -- 5.12 Conclusion -- References -- 6: Evaluation of a Distribution-Based Web Page Classification
The Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities is about researching media through new media: for example, playing games to better understand their politics and mechanics, exhibiting new media art to witness how people engage it, building stories to become more familiar with their structures and narratives, making wearable technologies to explore the overlaps between norms and fashion, or developing software to examine its relation to writing and literacy. In this introduction, I survey some tensions and overlaps between media studies and digital humanities and then focus on four key areas of analysis emerging from their intersection in this companion: moving beyond text in digital humanities research, foregrounding the importance of collaboration and laboratories outside of the sciences, underscoring the need for cultural criticism and social justice research when working with technologies, and expanding what "intervention" and "research contribution" mean in a moment obsessed with "doing," "making," and "hacking." I conclude the introduction with an outline and rationale for each of the Companion's five sections: Access, Praxis, Justice; Design, Interface, Interaction; Mediation, Method, Materiality; Remediation, Data, Memory; and Making, Programming, Hacking.
Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Chapter outline -- 1 Living and Managing Diversity -- Living multi-culture, living (super)diversity -- From assimilation to multiculturalism -- From multiculturalism to integration or back to (new) assimilation? -- Media, diversity, policy -- Conclusion -- 2 Media Diversity and the Public Service Tradition -- Public service broadcasting -- Public service broadcasting, national culture and minorities -- Marketization and changes in public service broadcasting -- Public service broadcasting from multiculturalism to diversity and beyond -- New media and diversity of access -- Conclusion -- 3 Media Diversity and the Marketplace of Ideas -- The marketplace of ideas -- The question of perfect competition -- The limitations of advertising as a funding model -- Alternatives to advertising? -- The larger framework of deregulation and privatization -- Conclusion -- 4 Transnationalization of Media and Audiences -- The making of European television -- One-way flow of media contents -- A transnational media order -- Transnational media consumption -- New media technologies and transnationalization -- Conclusion -- 5 Diversity and Media Producers -- Journalists and their profession -- Women journalists -- Gendered news organizations and practices -- The case of ethnicity -- Conclusion -- 6 Diverse Societies, Diverse Contents -- Why and how democracies regulate media contents -- Public service broadcasting - positive requirements -- Impartial and balanced news -- Diversity and entertainment contents -- New media technologies - everyone a content maker? -- Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.