European Audiovisual Policy in Transition
Herausgeber: Ranaivoson, Heritiana; Raats, Tim; Broughton Micova, Sally
European Audiovisual Policy in Transition
Herausgeber: Ranaivoson, Heritiana; Raats, Tim; Broughton Micova, Sally
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This book describes and critically addresses the innovations and shifts made in the revision of the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) adopted by the European Parliament and Council in 2018.
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This book describes and critically addresses the innovations and shifts made in the revision of the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) adopted by the European Parliament and Council in 2018.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Routledge Studies in Media and Cultural Industries
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 276
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 161mm x 241mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 550g
- ISBN-13: 9781032184487
- ISBN-10: 1032184485
- Artikelnr.: 67401354
- Routledge Studies in Media and Cultural Industries
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 276
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Mai 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 161mm x 241mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 550g
- ISBN-13: 9781032184487
- ISBN-10: 1032184485
- Artikelnr.: 67401354
Heritiana Ranaivoson is Senior Researcher and Project Leader at imec-SMIT-Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium. Sally Broughton Micova is Associate Professor in Communications Policy and Politics at the University of East Anglia, UK, and member of its Centre for Competition Policy. Tim Raats is Associate Professor at the Communication Sciences department of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and head of the Media Economics and Policy Unit at imec-SMIT-VUB.
Part 1: Introduction 1. European Audiovisual media in transition: Editor's
Introduction (Tim Raats, Sally Broughton Micova & Heritiana Ranaivoson)
2. From the Television without Frontiers Directive to the Audiovisual Media
Services Directive (Sally Broughton Micova) Part 2: The EU audiovisual
policy between national and supranational governance 3. More coordination
between national media regulators and implications for their independence
in the digital environment (Gabor Polyák & Tanja Kerevan Smokvina) 4.
Between minimal standards and national variation: minimum harmonization of
advertising rules (Nadia Feci & Peggy Valcke) Part 3: Involving
video-sharing platforms in the protection of their users 5.
Responsibilities of video-sharing platforms and their users (Sally
Broughton Micova & ¿ubo Kukli) 6. Video-sharing platforms under the
AVMSD: Transnational and multi-stakeholder cooperation (Ivana Kostovska &
Sally Broughton Micova) Part 4: Media ownership and transparency 7. EU and
the complex, nation-dependent web of media ownership regulation in Europe.
The role of media ownership rules in limiting market concentration
(Adelaida Afilipoaie & Heritiana Ranaivoson) 8. The Audiovisual Media
Services Directive and the effectiveness of media transparency requirements
(Heritiana Ranaivoson & Krisztina Rozgonyi) Part 5: Promoting domestic and
European works 9. 'Netflix taxes' as tools for supporting European
audiovisual ecosystems: Policy interventions for rights retention by
independent producers (Ivana Kostovska, Marlen Komorowski, Tim Raats &
Stephanie Tintel) 10. Content quotas: At the crossroads between cultural
diversity and economic sustainability (Catalina Iordache, Petar Mitric &
Tim Raats) 11. Safeguarding the visibility of European audiovisual services
online: an analysis of the new prominence and discoverability rules (Mª
Trinidad García Leiva & Eleonora Maria Mazzoli) Part 6: Signal integrity:
an emerging issue for regulators 12. Signal Integrity in EU Member States:
Much Ado About Nothing? (Hilde van den Bulck, Steven Dewaele & Karen
Donders) 13. Signal integrity. EU media policymaking at its best or worst
(Adelaida Afilipoaie, Steven Dewaele & Karen Donders) 14. Conclusion: How
future-proof is the AVMSD? (Heritiana Ranaivoson, Tim Raats & Sally
Broughton Micova)
Introduction (Tim Raats, Sally Broughton Micova & Heritiana Ranaivoson)
2. From the Television without Frontiers Directive to the Audiovisual Media
Services Directive (Sally Broughton Micova) Part 2: The EU audiovisual
policy between national and supranational governance 3. More coordination
between national media regulators and implications for their independence
in the digital environment (Gabor Polyák & Tanja Kerevan Smokvina) 4.
Between minimal standards and national variation: minimum harmonization of
advertising rules (Nadia Feci & Peggy Valcke) Part 3: Involving
video-sharing platforms in the protection of their users 5.
Responsibilities of video-sharing platforms and their users (Sally
Broughton Micova & ¿ubo Kukli) 6. Video-sharing platforms under the
AVMSD: Transnational and multi-stakeholder cooperation (Ivana Kostovska &
Sally Broughton Micova) Part 4: Media ownership and transparency 7. EU and
the complex, nation-dependent web of media ownership regulation in Europe.
The role of media ownership rules in limiting market concentration
(Adelaida Afilipoaie & Heritiana Ranaivoson) 8. The Audiovisual Media
Services Directive and the effectiveness of media transparency requirements
(Heritiana Ranaivoson & Krisztina Rozgonyi) Part 5: Promoting domestic and
European works 9. 'Netflix taxes' as tools for supporting European
audiovisual ecosystems: Policy interventions for rights retention by
independent producers (Ivana Kostovska, Marlen Komorowski, Tim Raats &
Stephanie Tintel) 10. Content quotas: At the crossroads between cultural
diversity and economic sustainability (Catalina Iordache, Petar Mitric &
Tim Raats) 11. Safeguarding the visibility of European audiovisual services
online: an analysis of the new prominence and discoverability rules (Mª
Trinidad García Leiva & Eleonora Maria Mazzoli) Part 6: Signal integrity:
an emerging issue for regulators 12. Signal Integrity in EU Member States:
Much Ado About Nothing? (Hilde van den Bulck, Steven Dewaele & Karen
Donders) 13. Signal integrity. EU media policymaking at its best or worst
(Adelaida Afilipoaie, Steven Dewaele & Karen Donders) 14. Conclusion: How
future-proof is the AVMSD? (Heritiana Ranaivoson, Tim Raats & Sally
Broughton Micova)
Part 1: Introduction 1. European Audiovisual media in transition: Editor's
Introduction (Tim Raats, Sally Broughton Micova & Heritiana Ranaivoson)
2. From the Television without Frontiers Directive to the Audiovisual Media
Services Directive (Sally Broughton Micova) Part 2: The EU audiovisual
policy between national and supranational governance 3. More coordination
between national media regulators and implications for their independence
in the digital environment (Gabor Polyák & Tanja Kerevan Smokvina) 4.
Between minimal standards and national variation: minimum harmonization of
advertising rules (Nadia Feci & Peggy Valcke) Part 3: Involving
video-sharing platforms in the protection of their users 5.
Responsibilities of video-sharing platforms and their users (Sally
Broughton Micova & ¿ubo Kukli) 6. Video-sharing platforms under the
AVMSD: Transnational and multi-stakeholder cooperation (Ivana Kostovska &
Sally Broughton Micova) Part 4: Media ownership and transparency 7. EU and
the complex, nation-dependent web of media ownership regulation in Europe.
The role of media ownership rules in limiting market concentration
(Adelaida Afilipoaie & Heritiana Ranaivoson) 8. The Audiovisual Media
Services Directive and the effectiveness of media transparency requirements
(Heritiana Ranaivoson & Krisztina Rozgonyi) Part 5: Promoting domestic and
European works 9. 'Netflix taxes' as tools for supporting European
audiovisual ecosystems: Policy interventions for rights retention by
independent producers (Ivana Kostovska, Marlen Komorowski, Tim Raats &
Stephanie Tintel) 10. Content quotas: At the crossroads between cultural
diversity and economic sustainability (Catalina Iordache, Petar Mitric &
Tim Raats) 11. Safeguarding the visibility of European audiovisual services
online: an analysis of the new prominence and discoverability rules (Mª
Trinidad García Leiva & Eleonora Maria Mazzoli) Part 6: Signal integrity:
an emerging issue for regulators 12. Signal Integrity in EU Member States:
Much Ado About Nothing? (Hilde van den Bulck, Steven Dewaele & Karen
Donders) 13. Signal integrity. EU media policymaking at its best or worst
(Adelaida Afilipoaie, Steven Dewaele & Karen Donders) 14. Conclusion: How
future-proof is the AVMSD? (Heritiana Ranaivoson, Tim Raats & Sally
Broughton Micova)
Introduction (Tim Raats, Sally Broughton Micova & Heritiana Ranaivoson)
2. From the Television without Frontiers Directive to the Audiovisual Media
Services Directive (Sally Broughton Micova) Part 2: The EU audiovisual
policy between national and supranational governance 3. More coordination
between national media regulators and implications for their independence
in the digital environment (Gabor Polyák & Tanja Kerevan Smokvina) 4.
Between minimal standards and national variation: minimum harmonization of
advertising rules (Nadia Feci & Peggy Valcke) Part 3: Involving
video-sharing platforms in the protection of their users 5.
Responsibilities of video-sharing platforms and their users (Sally
Broughton Micova & ¿ubo Kukli) 6. Video-sharing platforms under the
AVMSD: Transnational and multi-stakeholder cooperation (Ivana Kostovska &
Sally Broughton Micova) Part 4: Media ownership and transparency 7. EU and
the complex, nation-dependent web of media ownership regulation in Europe.
The role of media ownership rules in limiting market concentration
(Adelaida Afilipoaie & Heritiana Ranaivoson) 8. The Audiovisual Media
Services Directive and the effectiveness of media transparency requirements
(Heritiana Ranaivoson & Krisztina Rozgonyi) Part 5: Promoting domestic and
European works 9. 'Netflix taxes' as tools for supporting European
audiovisual ecosystems: Policy interventions for rights retention by
independent producers (Ivana Kostovska, Marlen Komorowski, Tim Raats &
Stephanie Tintel) 10. Content quotas: At the crossroads between cultural
diversity and economic sustainability (Catalina Iordache, Petar Mitric &
Tim Raats) 11. Safeguarding the visibility of European audiovisual services
online: an analysis of the new prominence and discoverability rules (Mª
Trinidad García Leiva & Eleonora Maria Mazzoli) Part 6: Signal integrity:
an emerging issue for regulators 12. Signal Integrity in EU Member States:
Much Ado About Nothing? (Hilde van den Bulck, Steven Dewaele & Karen
Donders) 13. Signal integrity. EU media policymaking at its best or worst
(Adelaida Afilipoaie, Steven Dewaele & Karen Donders) 14. Conclusion: How
future-proof is the AVMSD? (Heritiana Ranaivoson, Tim Raats & Sally
Broughton Micova)