All Stories

  1. The streaming industry and the platform economy: An analysis
  2. Global streamers: Placing the transnational at the heart of TV culture
  3. Standing on the shoulders of tech giants: Media delivery, streaming television and the rise of global suppliers
  4. Outsourcing in the U.K. Television Industry: A Global Value Chain Analysis
  5. Hedging against disaster: Risk and mitigation in the media and entertainment industries
  6. The TV format trade and the world media system: Change and continuity
  7. Can a GVC-oriented policy mitigate the inequalities of the world media system? Strategies for economic upgrading in the TV format global value chain
  8. Jean K. Chalaby, The Format Age: Television’s Entertainment RevolutionChalabyJean K., The Format Age: Television’s Entertainment Revolution. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016; 216 pp.: £55.00/€75.87 (hbk), £16.99/€23.42 (pbk), £11.99/€19.99 (E-book)
  9. Television and Globalization: The TV Content Global Value Chain
  10. The advent of the transnational TV format trading system: a global commodity chain analysis
  11. Drama without Drama
  12. Reflection i: Transnational TV Formats: Making the Local Visible and the Global Invisible
  13. Producing TV Content in a Globalized Intellectual Property Market: The Emergence Of The International Production Model
  14. At the origin of a global industry: The TV format trade as an Anglo-American invention
  15. The making of an entertainment revolution: How the TV format trade became a global industry
  16. The rise of Britain’s super-indies: Policy-making in the age of the global media market
  17. Public Broadcasters and Transnational Television: Coming to Terms with the New Media Order
  18. Broadcasting in a Post-National Environment: The Rise of Transnational TV Groups
  19. Advertising in the global age
  20. American Cultural Primacy in a New Media Order
  21. French Political Communication in a Comparative Perspective: The Media and the Issue of Freedom
  22. Deconstructing the transnational: a typology of cross-border television channels in Europe
  23. From internationalization to transnationalization
  24. Scandal and the Rise of Investigative Reporting in France
  25. Television for a New Global Order: Transnational Television Networks and the Formation of Global Systems
  26. Transnational Television in Europe
  27. The de Gaulle Presidency and the Media
  28. The ORTF as State Broadcaster
  29. Conclusion: a Statist Public Communications System
  30. The President and the Press
  31. De Gaulle’s Communications Strategy
  32. The National Broadcaster during the de Gaulle Presidency
  33. The Press, 1945–69
  34. One State, One Nation, One Television: Making Sense of de Gaulle’s Broadcasting Policy
  35. The State Radio and Television during the Fourth Republic
  36. Press Opinion during the de Gaulle Presidency
  37. Reason of State and Public Communications: de Gaulle in Context
  38. ‘Smiling Pictures Make People Smile’: Northcliffe's journalism
  39. Journalism studies in an era of transition in public communications
  40. New Media, New Freedoms, New Threats
  41. The Broadcasting Media in the Age of Risk
  42. Political Communication in Presidential Regimes in Non-Consolidated Democracies: A Comparative Perspective
  43. A Charismatic Leader's Use of the Media
  44. The media and the formation of the public sphere in the new Independent States
  45. The Invention of Journalism
  46. Journalists and Their Public
  47. Journalistic Discursive Strategies
  48. The Polarization of the British Press
  49. The Formation of the Journalistic Field
  50. Discursive Norms and Practices in Journalism
  51. Introduction
  52. Press and Politics: A New Relationship
  53. ‘Knowledge is Power’: The Working-Class Unstampeds as an Example of Public Discourse
  54. Beyond the Prison-House of Language: Discourse as a Sociological Concept
  55. No ordinary press owners: press barons as a Weberian ideal type
  56. Beyond the Prison-House of Language: Discourse as a Sociological Concept
  57. Journalism as an Anglo-American Invention
  58. Twenty years of contrast: the French and British press during the inter-war period
  59. Public Communication in Totalitarian, Authoritarian and Statist Regimes A Comparative Glance