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    Chapter 7 | Accountability of Media to Society: Principles and Means
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    Chapter 9 | Political Communication Systems All Change: a Response to Kees Brants
  • 1 | Introduction and Overview
  • 2 | Research into International Television Flows: A Methodological Contribution
  • 3 | The Mythology about Globalization
  • 4 | The Inflow of American Television Fiction on European Broadcasting Channels Revisited
  • 5 | Five Traditions in Search of the Audience
  • 6 | Resisting American Hegemony: A Comparative Analysis of the Reception of Domestic and US Fiction
  • 7 | Accountability of Media to Society: Principles and Means
  • 8 | Who's Afraid of Infotainment?
  • 9 | Political Communication Systems All Change: a Response to Kees Brants
  • 10 | ‘Four Mothers’: The Womb in the Public Sphere
  • 11 | A Critical Review and Assessment of Herman and Chomsky's ‘Propaganda Model’
  • 12 | The Sacred Side of Professional Journalism
  • 13 | Telling Stories: Sociology, Journalism and the Informed Citizen1
  • 14 | Beyond Journalism: A Profession between Information Society and Civil Society
  • 15 | Journalistic Codes of Ethics in Europe
  • 16 | ‘Infosuasion’ in European Newspapers: A Case Study on the War in Kosovo
  • 17 | News Production in Contemporary Russia: Practices of Power
  • 18 | European Soap Operas: The Diversification of a Genre
  • 19 | Gendering the Internet: Claims, Controversies and Cultures
  • 20 | Lifestyle Segmentation: From Attitudes, Interests and Opinions, to Values, Aesthetic Styles, Life Visions and Media Preferences
  • 21 | Consumer Culture, Islam and the Politics of Lifestyle: Fashion for Veiling in Contemporary Turkey