Table of Contents
List of Contributors
List of Figures and Tables
Chapter 1. Introduction
Tobias Eberwein, Susanne Fengler & Matthias Karmasin
Chapter 2. Austria: Back on the Democratic Corporatist Road?
Matthias Karmasin, Klaus Bichler & Andy Kaltenbrunner
Chapter 3. Belgium: Divided Along Language Lines
Karin Raeymaeckers & François Heinderyckx
Chapter 4. Bulgaria: Regaining Media Freedom
Bissera Zankova & Michał Głowacki
Chapter 5. Croatia: Unfulfilled Expectations
Stjepan Malović
Chapter 6. Cyprus: Behind Closed (Journalistic) Doors
Dimitra L. Milioni, Lia-Paschalia Spyridou & Michalis Koumis
Chapter 7. Czech Republic: The Market Governs
Tomáš Trampota
Chapter 8. Denmark: Voluntary Accountability Driven by Political Pressure
Mark Blach-Ørsten, Jannie Møller Hartley & Sofie Flensburg
Chapter 9. Estonia: Conflicting Views on Accountability Practices
Urmas Loit, Epp Lauk & Halliki Harro-Loit
Chapter 10. Finland: The Empire Renewing Itself
Jari Väliverronen & Heikki Heikkilä
Chapter 11. France: Media Accountability as an Abstract Idea?
Olivier Baisnée, Ludivine Balland & Sandra Vera Zambrano
Chapter 12. Germany: Disregarded Diversity
Tobias Eberwein, Susanne Fengler, Mariella Bastian & Janis Brinkmann
Chapter 13. Greece: Between Systemic Inefficiencies and Nascent Opportunities Online
Evangelia Psychogiopoulou & Anna Kandyla
Chapter 14. Hungary: Difficult Legacy, Slow Transformation
Agnes Urban
Chapter 15. Ireland: Moving from Courts to Institutions of Accountability
Roderick Flynn
Chapter 16. Israel: Media in Political Handcuffs
Noam Lemelshtrich Latar
Chapter 17. Italy: Transparency as an Inspiration
Sergio Splendore
Chapter 18. Latvia: Different Journalistic Cultures and Different Accountability Within One Media System
Ainars Dimants
Chapter 19. Lithuania: The Ideology of Liberalism and Its Flaws in the Democratic Performance of the Media
Kristina Juraitė, Auksė Balčytienė & Audronė Nugaraitė
Chapter 20. Luxembourg: Low Priority in a Confined Milieu
Mario Hirsch
Chapter 21. Malta: Media Accountability as a Two-legged ‘Tripod’
Joseph Borg & Mary Anne Lauri
Chapter 22. The Netherlands: From Awareness to Realization
Harmen Groenhart & Huub Evers
Chapter 23. Norway: Journalistic Power Limits Media Accountability
Paul Bjerke
Chapter 24. Poland: Accountability in the Making
Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska, Michał Głowacki & Michał Kuś
Chapter 25. Portugal: Many Structures, Little Accountability
Nuno Moutinho, Helena Lima, Suzana Cavaco & Ana Isabel Reis
Chapter 26. Romania: Unexpected Pressures for Accountability
Mihai Coman, Daniela-Aurelia Popa & Raluca-Nicoleta Radu
Chapter 27. Russia: Media Accountability to the Public or the State?
Elena Vartanova & Maria Lukina
Chapter 28. Slovakia: Conditional Success of Ethical Regulation via Online Instruments
Andrej Školkay
Chapter 29. Slovenia: The Paper Tiger of Media Accountability
Igor Vobič, Aleksander Sašo Slaček Brlek & Boris Mance
Chapter 30. Spain: New Formats and Old Crises
Salvador Alsius, Ruth Rodriguez-Martinez & Marcel Mauri de los Rios
Chapter 31. Sweden: A Long History of Media Accountability Adaption
Torbjörn von Krogh
Chapter 32. Switzerland: Role Model with Glitches
Colin Porlezza
Chapter 33. Turkey: Sacrificing Credibility for Economic Expediency and Partisanship
Ceren Sözeri
Chapter 34. United Kingdom: Post-Leveson, Media Accountability is All Over the Place
Mike Jempson, Wayne Powell & Sally Reardon
Chapter 35. Summary: Measuring Media Accountability in Europe – and Beyond
Tobias Eberwein, Susanne Fengler, Katja Kaufmann, Janis Brinkmann & Matthias Karmasin
References
Index