Document details

Future or Funeral? A Guide to Public Service Media Regulation in Europe

Wroclaw University;Article 19;Open Society Foundation;OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media (2011), 132 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 130-132

CC BY-NC-ND

"Chapter 1 describes the current, critical situation public media finds itself in, especially in Central and Eastern Europe. Twenty years after the regime changes, the current trend in media politics can be best described as a “counter-reformation” rather than a progressive transition. Many public media organisations are further away from stable and sound operation than ever, some of them teetering continuously on the brink of collapse. In a mix of cause and effect, this dire situation manifests itself in lack of funding, dearth of status among the public, a creative brain drain and waning program quality, quantity and variety. At the same time, the whole media sector comes under increasing economic pressure that is fuelled by the impact of both digitalisation and a concurrent world financial crisis. In chapter 2 the remit of public media is discussed, with a special emphasis on scrutinising the thesis of universal objectives versus the necessity to provide an acceptable level of programming diversity. Chapter 3 contains the three constitutional pillars of media regulation as identifi ed by the authors: governance, funding and access. The suggestion being that the malfunctioning of just one of these three elements would cause the disintegration of the whole system." (Page 8)
1 Public Service Media in Europe—Future or Funeral? / Michal Glowacki, 10
2 Towards an Understanding of the Public Service Media Remit Today—A Pan-European Consensus? / Michal Glowacki, 27
3 Legal Guidelines on Public Service Media Governance, 43
3.1 Governance / Boyko Boev, 44
3.2 Funding / Susanne Nikoltchev and Francisco Javier Cabrera Blàzquez, 78
3.3 Access / Michal Kus, 110