Content
2015, Volume 3, Issue 4
- 1-4 A View from the Inside: The Dawning Of De-Westernization of CEE Media and Communication Research?
by Epp Lauk - 5-14 Revisiting National Journalism Cultures in Post-Communist Countries: The Influence of Academic Scholarship
by Halliki Harro-Loit - 15-25 Values Underlying the Information Culture in Communist and Post-Communist Russia (1917−1999)
by Hedwig de Smaele - 26-34 Governance of Public Service Media in Poland: The Role of the Public
by Michal Glowacki - 35-44 Online Political Campaigning during the 2014 Regional Elections in Poland
by Paweł Baranowski - 45-51 One Country, Two Polarised Audiences: Estonia and the Deficiency of the Audiovisual Media Services Directive
by Andres Jõesaar - 52-61 Czech Journalists’ Refreshed Sense of Ethics in the Midst of Media Ownership Turmoil
by Roman Hájek & Sandra Štefaniková & Filip Láb & Alice N. Tejkalová - 62-75 Comparing Czech and Slovak Council Newspapers’ Policy and Regulation Development
by Lenka Waschkova Cisarova - 76-90 Voice of the Church: A Debate about Religious Radio Stations as Community Broadcasters
by Gabriella Velics & Urszula Doliwa - 91-105 Media Literacy in Montenegro
by Jelena Perovic - 106-115 Who Is Willing to Pay for Online Journalistic Content?
by Marju Himma-Kadakas & Ragne Kõuts - 116-119 Journalism that Matters: Views from Central and Eastern Europe. By Michał Głowacki, Epp Lauk and Auksė Balčytienė. Bern: Peter Lang, 2014, 214 pp.; ISBN: 978-3-631-65421-7 hb
by Elena Rodina
2015, Volume 3, Issue 3
- 1-11 Beyond Privacy: Articulating the Broader Harms of Pervasive Mass Surveillance
by Christopher Parsons - 12-25 “Veillant Panoptic Assemblage”: Mutual Watching and Resistance to Mass Surveillance after Snowden
by Vian Bakir - 26-38 Attaching Hollywood to a Surveillant Assemblage: Normalizing Discourses of Video Surveillance
by Randy K Lippert & Jolina Scalia - 39-55 The New Transparency: Police Violence in the Context of Ubiquitous Surveillance
by Ben Brucato - 56-67 First They Came for the Poor: Surveillance of Welfare Recipients as an Uncontested Practice
by Nathalie Maréchal - 68-80 “Austerity Surveillance” in Greece under the Austerity Regime (2010−2014)
by Minas Samatas - 81-90 Interveillance: A New Culture of Recognition and Mediatization
by André Jansson
2015, Volume 3, Issue 2
- 1-5 Special Issue on Surveillance: Editor’s Introduction
by James Schwoch & John Laprise & Ivory Mills - 6-9 Surveillance and Critical Theory
by Christian Fuchs - 10-20 Theorizing Surveillance in the UK Crime Control Field
by Michael McCahill - 21-41 Surveillance and Resilience in Theory and Practice
by Charles D. Raab & Richard Jones & Iván Székely - 42-52 The Copyright Surveillance Industry
by Mike Zajko - 53-62 EU Law and Mass Internet Metadata Surveillance in the Post-Snowden Era
by Nora Ni Loideain - 63-76 Subjunctive and Interpassive “Knowing” in the Surveillance Society
by Sun-ha Hong - 77-87 The Role of Hackers in Countering Surveillance and Promoting Democracy
by Sebastian Kubitschko - 88-97 Literacies for Surveillance: Social Network Sites and Background Investigations
by Sarah Jackson Young
2015, Volume 3, Issue 1
- 1-4 Climate Crisis and Communication: Reflections on Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything
by Robert A. Hackett - 5-16 Facebook Users’ Engagement and Perceived Life Satisfaction
by Tammy R. Vigil & H. Denis Wu - 17-33 The Dynamics of Issue Attention in Online Communication on Climate Change
by Ines Lörcher & Irene Neverla - 34-43 Encoding Systems and Evolved Message Processing: Pictures Enable Action, Words Enable Thinking
by Annie Lang & Rachel L. Bailey & Sean Ryan Connolly
2014, Volume 2, Issue 2
- 1-30 Predicting Social Networking Site Use and Online Communication Practices among Adolescents: The Role of Access and Device Ownership
by Drew P. Cingel & Alexis R. Lauricella & Ellen Wartella & Annie Conway - 31-41 Violence in Popular U.S. Prime Time TV Dramas and the Cultivation of Fear: A Time Series Analysis
by Daniel Romer & Patrick Jamieson - 42-54 Between Objectivity and Openness—The Mediality of Data for Journalism
by Frédérik Lesage & Robert A. Hackett - 55-71 The Nanking Atrocity: Still and Moving Images 1937–1944
by Gary Evans - 72-83 Impact of Social Media on Power Relations of Korean Health Activism
by KyuJin Shim - 84-95 The Problem of Realist Events in American Journalism
by Kevin G. Barnhurst
2014, Volume 2, Issue 1
- 1-1 In Memoriam: Hannes Haas
by Elisabeth Klaus & Bradley S. Greenberg & António Vieira - 2-12 Card Stories on YouTube: A New Frame for Online Self-Disclosure
by Sabina Misoch - 13-22 Documentary and Cognitive Theory: Narrative, Emotion and Memory
by Ib Bondebjerg
2013, Volume 1, Issue 1
- 1-1 Media and Communication: Why Another Journal?
by Bradley S. Greenberg & Hannes Haas & Elisabeth Klaus - 2-14 Understanding Social Media Logic
by José van Dijck & Thomas Poell - 15-27 Agenda Trending: Reciprocity and the Predictive Capacity of Social Networking Sites in Intermedia Agenda Setting across Topics over Time
by Jacob Groshek & Megan Clough Groshek - 28-38 Predicting Social Networking Site Use and Online Communication Practices among Adolescents: The Role of Access and Device Ownership
by Drew P. Cingel & Alexis R. Lauricella & Ellen Wartella & Annie Conway - 39-50 Between Objectivity and Openness—The Mediality of Data for Journalism
by Frédérik Lesage & Robert A. Hackett - 51-67 The Nanking Atrocity: Still and Moving Images 1937–1944
by Gary Evans