Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites
Abstract
In this article, we use the hierarchy-of-influences model as a framework for examining the ways in which media owners, managers and journalists perceive the influence exerted on their work during 12-year democratic transition in Serbia. We aim to explain how factors perceived as influential at the highest system level gradually transfer and relate to the factors on the subsumed levels. Using the concepts such as corruption and the culture of corruption to interpret hierarchy between different levels of influence on transitional journalism, we argue that coupling extra-media actors at the system level can be considered corruption - understood as abuse of power for personal gain or benefit of the aligned group - which translates to all other levels of influence.
Keywords:
Corruption / hierarchy-of-influences / media autonomy / Serbia / transitional journalismSource:
European Journal of Communication, 2018, 33, 1, 37-56Publisher:
- Sage Publications Ltd, London
Funding / projects:
- Media, Conflict and Democratisation (EU-613370)
DOI: 10.1177/0267323117750674
ISSN: 0267-3231
WoS: 000424643700004
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85041847699
Collections
Institution/Community
FPNTY - JOUR AU - Milojević, Ana AU - Krstić, Aleksandra PY - 2018 UR - http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/673 AB - In this article, we use the hierarchy-of-influences model as a framework for examining the ways in which media owners, managers and journalists perceive the influence exerted on their work during 12-year democratic transition in Serbia. We aim to explain how factors perceived as influential at the highest system level gradually transfer and relate to the factors on the subsumed levels. Using the concepts such as corruption and the culture of corruption to interpret hierarchy between different levels of influence on transitional journalism, we argue that coupling extra-media actors at the system level can be considered corruption - understood as abuse of power for personal gain or benefit of the aligned group - which translates to all other levels of influence. PB - Sage Publications Ltd, London T2 - European Journal of Communication T1 - Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites EP - 56 IS - 1 SP - 37 VL - 33 DO - 10.1177/0267323117750674 ER -
@article{ author = "Milojević, Ana and Krstić, Aleksandra", year = "2018", abstract = "In this article, we use the hierarchy-of-influences model as a framework for examining the ways in which media owners, managers and journalists perceive the influence exerted on their work during 12-year democratic transition in Serbia. We aim to explain how factors perceived as influential at the highest system level gradually transfer and relate to the factors on the subsumed levels. Using the concepts such as corruption and the culture of corruption to interpret hierarchy between different levels of influence on transitional journalism, we argue that coupling extra-media actors at the system level can be considered corruption - understood as abuse of power for personal gain or benefit of the aligned group - which translates to all other levels of influence.", publisher = "Sage Publications Ltd, London", journal = "European Journal of Communication", title = "Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites", pages = "56-37", number = "1", volume = "33", doi = "10.1177/0267323117750674" }
Milojević, A.,& Krstić, A.. (2018). Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites. in European Journal of Communication Sage Publications Ltd, London., 33(1), 37-56. https://doi.org/10.1177/0267323117750674
Milojević A, Krstić A. Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites. in European Journal of Communication. 2018;33(1):37-56. doi:10.1177/0267323117750674 .
Milojević, Ana, Krstić, Aleksandra, "Hierarchy of influences on transitional journalism - Corrupting relationships between political, economic and media elites" in European Journal of Communication, 33, no. 1 (2018):37-56, https://doi.org/10.1177/0267323117750674 . .