Alvares Claudia Gustavo Cardoso Peter Da
Alvares Claudia Gustavo Cardoso Peter Da
Alvares Claudia Gustavo Cardoso Peter Da
Media in Europe:
New Questions for Research
and Policy
European Science Foundation (ESF) Forward Looks
The European Science Foundation (ESF) was Forward Looks enable Europe’s scientiic community,
established in 1974 to provide a common platform in interaction with policy makers, to develop medium-
for its Member Organisations to advance European to long-term views and analyses of future research
research collaboration and explore new directions for developments with the aim of deining research
research. It is an independent organisation, owned by agendas at national and European level. Forward
66 Member Organisations, which are research funding Looks are driven by ESF’s Member Organisations
organisations, research performing organisations and, by extension, the European research community.
and academies from 29 countries. ESF promotes Quality assurance mechanisms, based on peer review
collaboration in research itself, in funding of research where appropriate, are applied at every stage of the
and in science policy activities at the European level. development and delivery of a Forward Look to ensure
Currently ESF is reducing its research programmes its quality and impact.
while developing new activities to serve the science www.esf.org/flooks
community, including peer review and evaluation
services.
www.esf.org The Forward Look ‘Media in Europe’ emerged from a
workshop initiated by the ESF Standing Committees
for the Humanities (SCH) and Social Sciences (SCSS)
to address the need for research initiatives that would
bridge the methodological divides between the
humanities and the social sciences.
Authors
• Dr Claudia Alvares, Lusofona University, Portugal
• Professor Gustavo Cardoso, ISCTE, Portugal
• Professor Peter Dahlgren, Professor Emeritus,
Lund University, Sweden
• Professor Ola Erstad, University of Oslo, Norway
• Professor Johan Fornäs, Sodertorn University,
Huddinge, Sweden
• Professor Peter Golding, Northumbria University,
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
• Professor Hannu Nieminen, University of Helsinki,
Finland
• Professor Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist
University, Hong Kong
• Professor Slavko Splichal, University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia
• Dr Charis Xinaris, European University – Cyprus,
Nicosia, Cyprus
ISBN: 978-2-36873-007-2
Pictures: © iStockphoto
Contents
Foreword 3
Executive Summary 5
1. Introduction 9
4. Content Creation and Creative Industries: New Practices with Economic Prospects 24
6. Conclusions 36
7. Recommendations 42
Annex 1: Membership of the Scientiic Committee and the Quality Reference Group 50
Annex 2: Forward Look Activities and Participants 51
Foreword
l l l
he media are such a familiar part of everyday per- dramatic uses and abuses of communications 3
sonal, professional and social life that it oten takes media, we have become accustomed to them being
Media studies is a ield that has grown rapidly in to and use of technologies do not only relect exist- 5
recent years and which will become even more impor- ing social inequalities, in fact, they may also be an
• It is not suicient to take snapshots of the world if issue for media studies. Data in this area should
we want to understand trends and developments. ideally be included in the Council of European
Researchers must be permitted and supported Social Science Data Archives (CESSDA), and
to undertake long-term (diachronic) studies, strategies for the collation, management and dis-
meaning that research funders must comple- semination in this area should be developed.
ment their desire for immediate results with the • Training opportunities for doctoral and post-
ambition to obtain more durable and signiicant doctoral researchers in media and communication
indings. studies should be expanded, and dedicated long-
• As well as looking through time, we need to look term inancial support mechanisms set up. Such
across space in comparative investigation, mind- training should pay attention to the need to
ful that the easiest comparisons are not always the enlarge research capacity and capabilities in
most revelatory. Cross-national, but also regional international, collaborative, comparative and dia-
and local level analysis will yield precious insights chronic research, as outlined above.
into factors afecting the difusion, use and impact
of media and communication technologies, while he ultimate objective of the Forward Look on
comparisons across social and cultural groupings, Media Studies was to raise awareness among
age cohorts and generations are key to under- researchers and science policy makers of the impor-
standing diferential engagement with media and tance of taking up those essential questions and
communications at an even iner level of detail. infrastructural challenges. We hope the ideas and
• At the same time, media studies, by nature a challenges raised in this initiative provoke debate
hybrid ield, should be careful to remain theo- and assist in the development of forward-looking
retically grounded. Researchers and research research and policy in these vital ields of activity.
funders both must be attentive to the theoretical he quality of our individual and collective lives in
foundations of work programmes and research the twenty-irst century will depend on it.
projects, in even the most pragmatic-seeming or
policy-oriented study.
Box 1: Key research questions for the future
1. What is the relative impact of technologi- 7. How do new uses of communication tech-
cal innovation and socio-cultural context in nologies articulate with bodily experience, for
shaping the actual uses of digital media? example in the domains of healthcare, educa-
2. How do key trends in markets and media tion, art, gaming culture and fashion?
industries impact on public knowledge and 8. What are the implications for privacy and the
public culture, and how does public policy principles of democracy of the increasing use
relate to market imperatives? of new media technologies to facilitate every-
3. What is the relationship between cultural day social transactions?
production and consumption, the nature and 9. To what extent do diferent intellectual prop-
role of audiences, and economic, social and erty regimes facilitate or impede diferent
cultural stratiication? forms of creative agency?
4. How and in what ways are structural ine- 10. How will the demands of sustainability and
qualities associated with demographic and ecological considerations inluence the devel-
economic variables not merely coincidental opment of media technologies and their uses
with ‘digital divides’ but also both their cause in the future?
and efect? 11. What are the prospects, problems and poten- 7
5. How and under what circumstances does tials of European and other transnational
The European Science Foundation instrument would help advance the organisational cohesion of 9
called the ‘Forward Look’ is designed to develop European media research.
by a sense that the mainstream political system various strategic measures or even merely adverse
marginalises or excludes groups, many citizens are circumstances.
inding new routes to engagement and participa- here are a number of factors that impinge on
tion. Some forms of engagement are leading to new how participation actually functions at any particu-
kinds of political practices and new ways of being lar point in time for any particular group. he extent
citizens, efectively altering the character of politics to which civic participation is present naturally
in some contexts. depends on the initiatives that citizens themselves
Many activists within alternative politics sense take, but an analytically fundamental point is that
that strategic pressure can be brought upon decision such agency is always contingent on circumstances.
makers in diferent ways. hese impulses contrib- Our question thus becomes: what are the contin-
ute to the development of what Rosanvallon (2008) gencies that shape participation today? Since much
terms counter-democracy, the process whereby participation takes place through (new) media, they
citizens, in various constellations, exercise indi- can be seen as part of these contingencies, as both
rect democratic power by bypassing the electoral enablers and inhibitors of political participation.
system. hese developments, though in many ways
encouraging, are not without their dark sides: the
present crises have meant that reengagement also What research tells us: digital
includes the rise of political activities on the far media enable but cannot ensure
Right, expressing racist, ultra-nationalistic and political participation
other anti-democratic sentiments.
In order to analyse the link between individu- Traditional mass media journalism, as the classic
als and social agency within the informal setting medium of the public sphere, is a key institution
of non-institutional politics, we should focus on of the public sphere, and its functioning is vital to
the role of ‘passions’ in public space. In a time of the dynamics of democracy. It has historically oten
tumultuous change it is important to highlight been the object of legitimate criticism, when in its
newer ‘agonistic’ (Moufe, 1999) trends in political less laudable moments it has fostered ignorance and
life, in which individuals confront relevant issues. disorientation. he latter tendencies have lourished
he components of political agency appear to reso- in recent decades with the intensifying crisis within
nate most immediately in people’s lifeworlds of Western journalism, which has been characterised
meanings and identity. he task of comprehending as both an institutional/economic downturn and
democratic agency and participation directs our a professional decline. However, the distancing
attention to parameters at the taken-for-granted from the ideal of objectivity, with factual content
level that shape people’s willingness to engage in increasingly giving way to opinion, is not necessar-
politics. In this domain, the mechanisms of power ily negative. While reliable news useable for civic
are subtle. he perspective of civic cultures and their purposes is increasingly replaced by sensationalism,
tal communication: people and organisations can
directly link up with each other for purposes of
sharing information as well as afect, for providing
mutual support, organising, mobilising, or consoli-
dating collective identities. his feature makes it a
potentially strong facilitator of civic culture, help-
ing to strengthen engagement and participation.
Digital networks, in the form of polycentric nodes,
ofer a communication structure which can foster
democratic social relations, as Castells (2010) demon-
strates, impacting on how civic agency is enacted and
how politics gets done. It is important to underscore
the social character of such activity: the networking
involved helps to avoid the debilitating consequences
of isolation, promotes social capital, and helps to
forge collective identities.
his digital lubrication of the social is also essen-
celebrity gossip and other trivia, the prevalence of tial for the emergence of the political, for people to
opinion can simultaneously be regarded as a virtue step into their identities as political agents. People 13
and characteristic of ‘citizen journalism’, in which continue to develop their civic practices in online set-
list of activities, far behind consumption, entertain- in the ield, which ties in with our considerations
ment, social connections, pornography, and so on. on participation, concerns how the public sphere is
he internet does not, by itself, politically mobilise being altered through the use of new media, namely
citizens who may lack engagement. Moreover, for social media platforms, by politicians, citizens and
those who are engaged, there is a strong tendency alternative news services.
to drit towards like-minded discursive ‘cocoons’ his shit to new forms of political expression
or ‘echo chambers’ on the internet. here people may also correspond to an increasingly visible
are less likely to be confronted with views that dif- dichotomy between traditional institutional and
fer from their own – or to develop the capacity for alternative non-institutional politics. Thus, we
genuine argumentation. should inquire into what extent the modes of polit-
ical expression of alternative politics difer from
those of electoral politics. Moreover, the afective
What do we need to know? character of much online communication suggests
Comprehending new modes that it may well resonate with identity processes and
of participation and political collective memories in ways that traditional politi-
expression cal discourse is less likely to do. his suggests that
we should be alert to the diferent cultural patterns
While these features must be kept in view to under- whereby alternative politics functions to reconigure
stand the links between the internet and democracy, democracy on the one hand and traditional politics
the fact remains that the internet and social media attempts to reinvent itself on the other.
are both being successfully used on many fronts for In order to formulate a concrete research agenda
participation – and in fact altering the character for this purpose, we would irst proceed by attempt-
of the public sphere in the process. his leads us ing to map panoramas of society, democracy and
to probe into the nature of the changes concern- media which describe the background context
ing participation and the traditional public sphere. anchoring the historical speciicity of our topics of
Democracy is being transformed as its social, cul- analysis. Such broad vistas would entail the deline-
tural and political foundations evolve, and the ation of maps and genealogies of prevailing power
character of participation is a part of these large arrangements on one hand and of the ever-changing
developments. With regard to the media, the term media landscape – with a particular emphasis on
participation is oten used interchangeably with the web and social media – on the other hand.
access or interaction, which ignores its key dimen- his would be followed by the macro-level chart-
sion, namely that democratic participation must in ing of overarching proiles of media usage within
some way actualise and embody power relations, the population as a whole as well as for strategically
however weak or remote they may seem. Taking selected groups. he internet and mobile media
into account that democratic systems ofer varying would be in focus, but these would have to be situ-
ated in the context of the larger media landscape. of electoral politics and the vicissitudes of voter sub-
Such research would also include the evolution of jectivity and practices. his is because alternative
use patterns, socio-cultural impact on daily life forms of political expression, which are particularly
and institutions. A more analytic strand within the visible amongst counter-democratic groups, have
mapping of media usage proiles would illuminate been inluencing the modes of political communica-
media use in relation to social connections, collec- tion in the ‘traditional’ public sphere. As such, one
tive identities, social capital, and so forth, in order could select a broad range of arenas of involvement,
to map the discursive low of power and opinion from networks, social movements, activist groups,
formation. to transitory issue mobilisation, in order to extract
On the basis of the proiles of media usage, we useful lessons from their experiences that could be
could then draw up micro-level portraits of political applied in other contexts. Various corners of civil
agency, which illuminate the types of agencies that society, popular culture, and consumption would
are repressed, enabled or produced by the use of the be taken up in search of new modes of the political.
internet. While exploring subjectivity at the indi- Even examples of questionable, deviant expressions
vidual level, the target is not isolated individuals, of political disposition would be included.
but rather processes as they relate to forms of col- Our focus on the vitality of alternative poli-
lective identities, organisation, networking, and the tics, however, should simultaneously consider the
relationship between the personal and the political. latter’s coincidence with the ever greater grip of
Research here would be alert for new conceptions corporate power, precisely the soil in which the 15
of politics and the political; new forms of practice Occupy movement, for example, inds its nour-
From access to usage it was thought, would be very like that of television:
a new and expensive technology was adopted irst
he digital divide, variously conceived, has been by the wealthy but later, as the cost fell, it became
the subject of a large number of studies. At the risk close to universally available, with only very few
of gross over-simpliication, it is possible to deine households remaining without the means to receive
three currents of thought which approach the issue a signal. he main diference, it was argued, was that
from rather diferent perspectives. he earliest of the rate of difusion of the internet was much higher
these concentrates on the issue of the technological than for earlier technologies and therefore more or
means of access to the internet: access to personal less universal access would be achieved relatively
computers, including later mobile devices, and to quickly.
appropriate telecommunication links, beginning To some extent, these predictions have been
with ixed-line dial-up and today involving mobile borne out, at least in the developed world. A range of
broadband. The second and third approaches, studies has shown that, over time, the internet does
elaborated below, both accept these technological indeed become a much more pervasive feature of
dimensions as foundations for internet access but social life and that the stark gaps that were observed
also conceptualise the issue of the digital divide in the earliest period have diminished. An NTIA
in terms of possession of the necessary skills and report from February 2010 demonstrated that while
competences for using these technical afordances. 29.2% of the poorest group (with family incomes of
In the terms employed here, these latter approaches less than $US15,000) reported using the internet in
give relatively greater weight to digital competence. the home, amongst those in the richest group (with
family incomes of more than $US150,000) usage was
Patterns of physical access 88.7% (NTIA, 2010). his is still a substantial difer-
From the earliest studies of access to technological ence, but it is much smaller than that recorded in the
apparatus, it was apparent that the digital divide irst report in 1995. Similarly, Figure 1, illustrating
mapped very closely onto some of the standard soci- the most recent data from Europe, shows that, at
ological variables. One of the earliest studies, Falling least within the developed world, national difer-
hrough the Net, published in July 1995 by the US ences in levels of access persist, but are decreasing
National Telecommunications and Infrastructure over time. By this account, the digital divide is clos-
Authority (NTIA, 1995), showed that among the ing and may one day efectively disappear, in the
rural poor only around 1% had access to the tech- same way as diferences in access to broadcast televi-
nology then needed to go online (i.e. a computer and sion efectively disappeared in the past.
a modem), while for well-of urban households the The process is more protracted outside the
igure was around 30%. Such results were repeated developed world, but even in the developing world
in country ater country: income, age, gender, educa- wireless telephony means that it is possible to fore-
tion, location and so on were all powerful predictors see a future in which simple physical access to the
100
95 2007
93 93 92
2012
90 87 87
84 85
81 80
78 79 79 78
80 77
75 75 75 75 74
71 70
69 69 69 68
70 67 66
63 62 62
60 60 61
60 57 58
55 54 55 54 54
53
51 51
50
46 45
43 44
41 41 40
38 39
40
30
25
22
19
20 19
Portugal
Greece
UK
Iceland
Malta
Italy
Cyprus
Luxembourg
Ireland
EU 27
Norway
Belgium
Poland
Spain
Romania
Bulgaria
Finland
Austria
Estonia
Slovenia
Hungary
Sweden
France
Latvia
Slovakia
Croaa
Lithuania
Germany
Figure 1. Percentage Household Internet Penetration in Europe in 2007 and 2012 – Source: Eurostat
relevant technologies will be, if not universal, at with lower incomes and less education, as well as
least very much more widely difused. In many Blacks, Hispanics, people with disabilities, and
European countries, the ownership of a (ixed) tel- rural residents were less likely to have home Internet
ephone connection was still in the 1980s a socially access service” (NTIA, 2011: 11). his inding con-
and economically divisive factor. Today, the situ- irms more than a decade of previous research about
ation has dramatically changed: the number of the demographic factors that inluence access, but
mobile telephones in Europe exceeds the number further analysis demonstrated that these factors
of people. In 2011, there were 120 cellular mobile did not explain all of the diferences between social
subscriptions per 100 people in Europe. Even in groups. At the survey date in March 2010, 29% of
Africa, where access to ixed line telephony has US households did not have internet access at home.
been severely restricted, the spread of mobile con- When asked the reason for this, by far the largest
nections has been phenomenal: in 2011 almost 54% group (47%) stated that their reason was that they
of the African population had a mobile connection did not need it or were not interested in it (NTIA,
(ITU, 2013). 2011: 35). In other words, nearly 14% of US house-
Considered in more detail, however, there is one holds have made a more or less conscious decision
very important reservation to such a view: even in not to connect to the internet.
countries where the technical means of internet
access are widely available, and where policy ini- Factors in digital inclusion
tiatives designed to ensure universal take-up have hese indings suggest that the availability of tech-
long been in place, there remains a substantial pro- nology is not adequate to explain even physical
portion of the population that are unconnected. access to the internet and that the digital divide
A recent NTIA publication, Exploring the Digital can only be fully understood as a complex and
Nation: Computer and Internet Use at Home, inves- multi-dimensional phenomenon. It has long been
tigated this issue in some detail. In the USA, more recognised that, unlike television, the internet ena-
than 20% of the population remains without inter- bles an enormous range of diferent activities and
net access, and “the results indicate that households the uses to which it is put are multiple. here can,
therefore, be substantial diferences in the way that context, taken to constitute digital competence. In
digital technologies are used even when physical particular, they distinguished between what they
access is very widespread if not universal. term ‘operational and formal internet skills’ of the
he second main line of approach to the digital kind investigated by Guerrieri and his colleagues,
divide begins from the recognition of this complex- which allow people simply to use the internet with
ity and examines divergences in the social capital a greater or lesser degree of facility and what they
available to actual and potential users which would call “information and strategic internet skills” (van
allow them to enjoy ‘meaningful’ internet usage Deursen and van Dijk, 2010: 908). hese latter, they
(Gangadharan and Byrum, 2012). Following this argue, permit particular kinds of usage, and a high
line of thinking, Guerrieri and his collaborators level of such skills permits usage for news, infor-
developed a “European index of digital inclusion” mation and personal development. hey argue that
(EIDI) which combined measures of the availabil- there are distinct patterns of usage emerging that
ity of broadband infrastructure, of facility in usage map, once again, on to familiar social indicators.
and of impact, understood as the range of uses hese patterns demonstrate that there is emerging
to which the internet is put. he evolution of the a ‘structural usage gap.’ his gap is between difer-
components of this index demonstrated that, as ent social groups, some of whom habitually “take
time passes, internet usage is less and less a matter advantage of the serious Internet activities they
of physical access and much more a matter of the engage in, while others only use the Internet for
20 skills and resources available to users (Guerrieri and everyday life and entertaining activities” (van Dijk
Bentivegna, 2010: 115). & van Deursen, 2012: 15). he conclusion which they
Media in Europe: New Questions for Research and Policy
he EIDI study of the countries of the European draw from these indings is that the digital divide
Union arrived at striking conclusions. At the not only relects social inequalities but that it is
national level, diferences both in the components increasingly coming to be an element in their repro-
of the Index and of the Index itself, are both sig- duction. On this account, far from fading away, the
niicant and enduring over time, although there is a digital divide will persist and may well deepen.
general ‘improvement’ in the levels overall. A simi-
lar set of indings applies to the distribution of the
index with regard to those groups (e.g. the elderly, Towards a research agenda
women, rural dwellers, etc.) who have long been
known to be less likely to have even simple physical On all three of these accounts, the digital divide
access. he authors argue that the main reasons for remains a live issue for social scientiic investiga-
the diferences in what they call ‘e-Inclusion’ have tion and for public policy. he technology and the
to do with the level of economic development and skills involved change rapidly. he short history
social inequality. From this perspective, the aim of access has involved a shit from ixed-line dial-
of digital inclusion can only be realised if policy is up, through ixed-line broadband to the evolving
directed towards developing “a social system that technologies of mobile communication. he skills
promotes the economic development and social wel- required to use these technologies have changed
fare of its citizens by reducing inequality in all its just as quickly. Both the relevant technologies and
various aspects.” (Guerrieri and Bentivegna, 2010: the social resources needed for their utilisation
139). are likely to continue to change in the foreseeable
future. Understanding the drivers of these changes
Internet usage and social reproduction and the complex relationship between the technical
he third approach, best exempliied in the work of and the social factors involved will be a problem for
van Dijk and van Dursen, shares a great deal with many years to come.
the second, but accords even greater importance to
social inequality and shits attention further away The normative foundations of research
from physical access. he focus shits from seeing For a variety of reasons, the majority of studies, par-
inequalities of access and usage as resulting rom ticularly those which are closely articulated with
social inequalities towards one in they are seen as policy formulation, take a strongly normative stance
contributing to such inequalities. towards digital inclusion. Social groups that cur-
Basing their work on the situation in the rently do not have high participation rates are seen
Netherlands, which has a very high level of internet as problematic and, in the words of the British gov-
penetration, and where issues of physical access are ernment, will be “targeted” as part of a programme
of relatively limited importance, they investigated a of “driving digital participation” (Department for
much wider range of the skills that may be, in this Business, Innovation and Skills, 2010).
Such coercive rhetoric may be appropriate in or whether they are deeply rooted in social relations
policy proposals but an unreflective normative and require major policy initiatives to overcome.
approach is an obstacle to a properly social scien- To the extent to which these diferences are
tiic research agenda. he motivations and pleasures linked to levels of competence and confidence,
of social groups who choose not to have physical addressing them is partly an issue of digital
access to the internet, and those who use it for competence as an aspect of more general media
entertainment rather than self-improvement, can competence (Tuominen and Kotilainen, 2012).
only properly be understood if they are studied as Alongside research into the efectiveness of meas-
authentic human cultures rather than simply as ures to improve competence, there is a need to
problems to be targeted for correction. investigate diferent strategies for their provision.
More critical approaches also tend to rely upon Literacy, in both its general and speciic forms, has
a strong normative framework. Many writers, fol- long been a preserve of the formal education system,
lowing Bentham and Foucault, have argued that which usually operates under the direction of gov-
the widespread adoption of the internet leads to the ernmental policies which aim at universality and
perfection of a ‘digital panopticon’ in which every inclusivity and thus have the intent of reducing digi-
action is subject to computerised surveillance and tal divides. here is, however, an increasing amount
analysis (Campbell and Carlson, 2002). It is argued of educational material produced by commercial
that government and business gain unprecedented companies and, since such material is necessarily
knowledge of citizens and customers, and thus are rationed through price, it will tend to reproduce or 21
able to exercise more efective political and mar- exacerbate one of the most evident sources of the
In conclusion: inclusion
and participation
24
Media in Europe: New Questions for Research and Policy
represent alternative paths of skills and competen- textual expressions (multimodality), both of reme-
cies to the labour industries of the twentieth century. diation from former genres and a constant remixing
Media form the main sector deining these indus- of content, and sharing, collaboration and network
tries, not only as tools for creative processes such as relationships.
design and content creation, but also in the way that Creative practices are, to a greater degree than
media corporations invest in and develop important before, also based on processes of sharing rather
creative industries as economic forces within our than producing content and, through that, develop-
societies, as, for example, the Disney Corporation ing speciic communities of practice, of co-creative
and Pixar. According to the ‘he European Cluster labour and cultures of collaboration. How this is
Observatory Priority Sector Report: Creative and played out in diferent creative practices will dif-
Cultural Industries’ (Power, 2011) irms within the fer according to contexts and objectives of such
creative and cultural industries, in 2009, employed practices. Research literature also links notions of
a total of 6.4 million people in 30 European coun- empowerment and agency in the way people are
tries in 2009, and regions with high concentrations engaged in and develop certain creative practices
of creative and cultural industries have Europe’s (Lundby, 2008).
highest prosperity levels. Furthermore, most of the Over the past two decades, growing attention
regions in the top 25 highest cultural and creative has been devoted to the cultural and creative sector
growth regions are small and medium sized regions. as a powerful cluster of economic development in
In the past, the term ‘cultural industry’ used to cover complex and educated urban societies. Studies and
most of the employment and activities within the policy projects that aim to understand and invest
cultural sector represented by established cultural inancially in the creative sector have grown expo-
institutions in society; the term ‘creative industries’ nentially since 2008, as the inancial crisis deepened
is now used to refer to practices of content creation and investors sought alternative routes out of the
which have economic implications for the practition- quagmire.
ers and others, oten in the framework of small and Within the EU, attention is now directed to the
medium sized irms, for example within web design. impact of creative industries for economic growth
he value of the creative industries is both sym- and for the promotion of new sectors of employ-
bolic and economic. he symbolic capital arising ment. It is necessary for research to address the
from these ventures strengthens the self-awareness role of media in creating new economic markets
of creative societies whilst fostering a cultural legiti- and the impact of digital technologies on media
mation derived from the recognition of its members ownership, on structural developments of distri-
as being at the vanguard of artistic production and bution and access, as well as on new job markets
relection. Hence, by combining symbolic with eco- opened up by media developments. In a speciic
nomic value, the creative industries are now at the Communication from the EU Commission (COM
forefront of policy interests in modern societies and 2012: 4) it is argued that:
he cultural and creative sectors are faced with Such developments also open up research ori-
a rapidly changing environment driven by the entations towards creative learning as ways of
digital shit and globalisation, leading to the emer- engaging young people in culture (homson and
gence of new players, the coexistence of very big Seton-Green, 2011). As such, media literacy is a key
structures with micro-entities, a progressive trans- component of such a research orientation (homas,
formation of value chains and evolving consumer 2011). All aspects of media literacy are important,
behaviour and expectations. While these changes but, in particular, there is a need to focus on the
ofer great opportunities in terms of lower produc- ability to engage in critical relection on media
tion costs or new distribution channels, they call texts and practices. Through reading and writ-
for action at diferent levels. ing (multimodal authoring) we can develop social,
cultural and political understandings of the world.
Further, the document argues for a multi-layered Questions concerning critical media literacy, there-
strategy, encouraging interdisciplinarity in the fore, are at the heart of any research agenda in the
research approach, where media literacy and chang- years ahead.
ing skills are important factors.
he implications further raise awareness of the ii) Participation and sharing within creative
need to study the symbolic value represented by the communities
creative sector and the role of media. Old organi- here is an urgent need to focus research on crea-
sational structures are challenged and institutional tive participation as embedded in people’s everyday 27
structures are increasingly inluenced by creative lives, building on former ethnographic traditions
side by side with the economic edge of literacy. become important in the years to come in order
Consequently, ethical concerns also provide an to address the changes discussed in this chap-
important frame for the interaction between the ter, both related to the role of the researcher and
creative industries and media literacy and allow research designs and moving beyond dichoto-
for (an)other understanding of collaboration versus mies of quantitative and qualitative methods.
appropriation; dissemination versus media bullying; In particular, there is a need to focus more on
resistance versus repression. longitudinal research designs in order to trace
Looking ahead, there are various challenges to developments over time concerning audiences
be addressed. Below we have grouped some of the and industries, and as ways of following families,
important research questions and key challenges: communities and creative industries during dif-
i) Structural transitions ferent timescales. We also need to know more
To what extent will creative industries initiate about the interconnections between online and
changes in media structures, ownership and oline media practices and ways that mobile
business models? How, and to what degree, technologies support content creation across
will this evolve as fundamental changes within contexts and settings. Online research is still
media industries depend in part on the resources early in development and new methods are
allocated to them by existing and new industry needed. In response to these developments
actors? Will states legislate or regulate in this some argue for more processual methodologies
area, such as copyright legislation? How will (Drotner, 2013) and ways of involving research
industries manage a sustained media distribu- participants in data collection as participatory
tion system when we witness a paradigm shit research designs. Digital technologies also repre-
on sharing practices of media content? sent an important development as research tools,
ii) New audiences in ways of collecting multimodal data and sot-
In a context where accessibility to content ware for analysing large data sets (data mining).
becomes a key point, what are the new roles that Of course, these methodological issues raise sev-
participant audiences play in the multiplicity of eral ethical challenges, for example for the role
media landscapes in terms of production and of the researcher, ways of getting access to public
distribution? To what extent is ‘the participation’ and private content, and ways that data can be
of audiences in part a relection of the ‘techni- used for non-intended purposes. he growth
cal formats’ that enable such participation? Can of content creation and the creative industries
audiences, through networking and participa- will generate many methodological challenges
tion, add value to the development of content for media research in the years to come.
creation and lead to iterative innovation and
creative processes through ‘customer’ feedback
or even via hacking?
Conclusion
Scientiic:
We might ask about the scientific capacities of
media studies to take on the theoretical and concep-
tual challenges posed by media literacies in general
and creative aspects of these in particular. For
example, is the ield of audience studies in a posi-
tion to advance a systematic and holistic approach
to media literacies, given their increasing relevance
for (in)equities of employment, in addition to the
better-rehearsed citizenship-consumer options? Are
critical/cultural studies an option for investigat-
ing digital creativities that oten transcend binary
oppositions between critical relection and creative 29
expression – binaries that critical/cultural studies
Policy:
For policy makers in the area of cultural pro-
duction there is a need to develop holistic and
multi-layered approaches that include and inter-
connect the diferent aspects and actors of content
creation and creative industries. Agencies funding
media research will also need to re-orient the-
matic priorities along new challenges and evolving
research areas. Such areas would include: cultural
transformations due to content creation, eco-
nomic initiatives as part of media developments,
democratic participation in a creative culture, text
production and new forms of distribution of texts,
audiences as part of production and consumption,
creative learning as part of educational trajectories.
An important point concerns methodological re-ori-
entations, as media research needs to develop new
methodological approaches in order to study such
developments within cultural and media sectors.
5.
Identity Formation: From
Facebook Groups to Institutional
Forms of Cultural Heritage
l l l
30
Media in Europe: New Questions for Research and Policy
– from archives and libraries to museums and public he way in which conventional features of social
service media – in supporting identity formation interaction (e.g. immediacy or ritual social events)
and the dynamic of that change. limit or enhance identity formation in social media
In addition to these issues, social fragmentation environments should be explored.
and media fragmentation, as they relate to audience he ways in which the engagement in new ICTs
power and institutional power, place identity forma- redeines identity by creating distinctions between
tion in a ield of tension. he distribution of cultural non-users and (diferent kinds of) users is also of
capital across social space as well as the intersec- relevance. Furthermore, the trend towards indi-
tions between diferent identity dimensions, such as vidualisation in new media resources (techniques
age, gender, class and ethnicity, play an important and genres) also afects identity formation. Both
role in the formation of identity. here is a need the brighter and the darker aspects of, for instance,
to examine the materiality of mediated identities: the internet need to be acknowledged, neglect-
which identities are excluded or marginalised in ing neither its emancipatory nor its authoritarian
current media practices; which are the performa- potentials – the former linked to resources for
tive aspects of identity formation; and which bodies democratisation and empowerment, the latter to
(e.g. gendered, abled/disabled, young/aging) matter new forms of surveillance and post-panoptical ‘sous-
while others do not. For instance, the performances veillance’ as well as to misogynist and xenophobic
of (masculine, feminine or ‘queered’) gender and ‘haters’.
sexual identity are afected by developments of ‘new’
media access and content in feminist groups, male
subcultures, internet pornography, dating, chat- What are the consequences
rooms, blogs, information websites, etc. here is of the creation of new modes
furthermore a need to come to grips with the ways of identity formation?
in which ‘haters’ of various kinds (misogynistic,
homophobic, xenophobic, sectarian or fundamen- he third category of research questions concerns
talist ‘trolls’, etc.) threaten to undermine eforts to the consequences of new modes of identity forma-
make new media a vital element in public spheres. tion as they afect the development of transcultural
identities and the issue of empowerment.
Whether recent changes in cultural consumption
Why key modes of identities and media use have led to new forms of identity, e.g.
have changed changing the balance between European, national
and sub-national identiications, is a possible area of
he second category relates to the media-related investigation. his directly relates to the prospects,
causes behind current identity transformations, problems and potentials of transnational identi-
including matters of technology, form and context ties such as those linked to Europe, in a situation
of increasingly complex and multi-levelled global results in areas essential for an active participation
media lows (Arslan et al., 2009; Uricchio, 2008). It in a mediatised world. Failure to do so will not only
remains to be seen whether new social media con- prevent the theorisation of identity from advancing
tribute to intercultural dialogue and the emergence alongside a constantly evolving and rapidly expand-
of new ‘contact zones’ where diverse cultures meet, ing technology which has a direct impact on identity
as well as to what extent they shit or perpetuate formation, it will also hinder progress in inluencing
established power structures between diferent the material manifestations in all areas of society
cultures and societies. he role of language and and culture in a constructive manner.
translation for the formation of identity in ‘new’
media environments and the rise of hybrid linguis-
tic systems due to the use of ‘new’ media that further
contribute to the proliferation of more hybrid, luid,
transitory and de-territorialised identities have also
not been adequately researched. Current media
transformations afect the ways in which ictional
identities in arts, popular culture and games inter-
act with people’s own identiications and social
practices.
Media studies should get a better understand- 35
ing of issues related to empowerment, aimed at
Conclusion
36 he preceding four chapters outline the key deining mobilised, are of essential concern. he very notion
features of the issues we regard as demanding pri- and practice of citizenship in a democracy, in other
Media in Europe: New Questions for Research and Policy
ority in the ield of media studies in Europe in the words, are at issue, with the media in all their forms
years ahead. In each chapter we have explained why and changing nature at the heart of engagement and
the issue is important, what research has already empowerment.
revealed, and how changes in social and techno- he chapter suggests that we need a renewed
logical development demand that new questions research focus on the nature of alternative demo-
be addressed, both to take policy forward and to cratic politics. It also outlines the importance of
enlarge our understanding of these critical institu- mediatisation, the saturation of political communi-
tions and processes. We do not, of course, suggest cation of all kinds by media. he chapter questions
that these observations exhaust the research priori- the presumption that technology will inevitably and
ties or possibilities in this ield, but they do represent insistently enlarge possibilities for political action
a range of urgent and important questions. In this and mobilisation, not least because of its potential
chapter we set out a number of important questions for by-passing representative organisations and
that arise from this discussion and which can be institutions, and the possibility that selective expo-
translated into research tasks. In the subsequent sure in a diverse and individualised communication
chapter we outline some recommendations as to environment could emphasise the reinforcement
the infrastructure and support for research which of attitudes as much as constructive dialogue. he
would allow these objectives to be met. Chapter 6 chapter suggests prioritising research that considers
is thus addressed primarily to the research commu- ‘political agency in context’ and sets out a number of
nity and those responsible for developing research thematics that would follow from such a perspective.
strategy. It summarises the key issues identiied in In Chapter 3 we return to the vexed question of
the Forward Look discussions as priorities for the the digital divide. Large political and social ques-
medium-term future of media studies, intellectu- tions of equity and eiciency do not disguise the
ally, socially and culturally. For such research to be fact that, however complex and multi-dimensional,
undertaken however, attention to the organisational inequities in access to and ability to use new com-
and logistical bases for research is required, and munication technologies persist, and endure beyond
Chapter 7 addresses these questions. what once was expected to be a transient condition.
In Chapter 2 we assessed the ways in which polit- As the chapter concludes, the digital divide may well
ical engagement needed substantial investigation to be deepening, as it is not only relecting pre-existing
relect changing times and technologies. Writing inequalities but coming to be an element in their
in a period in which coincident crises of economies, reproduction. hus it remains vital to map the con-
welfare, political participation, and private–pub- tours of social disadvantage and inequality onto to
lic provision are all creating levels of uncertainty the use and ownership of communication facilities.
and political dilemmas unknown in a generation, One important task within this is to address evident
the means by which knowledge and information diferences between national experiences. What
about policy are disseminated, and political action might we learn from rigorous and well-structured
comparisons across national policy boundaries that the nation state or locality, through new ‘contact
could enlarge our understanding of, and hence abil- zones’, whether through practice or the consump-
ity to address, the digital divide in all its forms? tion of both ictional and non-ictional forms.
A further task lies in investigating the diferent All these debates of course contain within them
implications and outcomes of public and private the seeds of innumerable research questions and
provision in digital services. approaches. But we can now attempt to distil some
In Chapter 4 we consider the research questions of the more urgent themes into a set of priority
arising from examination of the creative industries. research questions.
While much research has looked into everyday expe-
rience and the values, ideas, beliefs and attitudes of
consumers, there is much less known about the acts Key research questions
and structures behind both creation and creativity. for the future
here remains a need to depart from the residue of
romantic excess imbued in the concept of creativ- 1. What is the relative impact of technological
ity, and to understand better the relationship of innovation and socio-cultural context in
symbolic to material value in the content of com- shaping the actual uses of digital media?
munications. One resource for taking this research hroughout its history, media research has grappled
forward is in the rediscovery and deployment of with an oten stereotyped simpliication referred
various ethnographic methodologies, and to recog- to as technological determinism. At its simplest, 37
nise that media research has always, for reasons of this idea suggests that innovations in technology –
that are provided under this rubric. Elements in the suggests they are not transient but embedded in the
emerging new media landscape, for example the nature of communication technologies, and ind
debate over net neutrality, demonstrate that these their roots in enduring features of social inequality.
factors will continue to inluence profoundly the hus, age efects are cohort rather than generation
facilities that citizens may employ. efects – diferences will not disappear as widening
use becomes commonplace among populations now
3. What is the relationship between cultural youthful but maturing along with the technologies.
production and consumption, the nature and Equally, as communications goods and services are
role of audiences, and economic, social and commodities to be bought and sold in the market
cultural stratiication? place, people’s relation to that market place – their
he study of consumption has long been considered disposable income and household circumstances
a ield of economics that has been largely disre- – play a major role in their use and experience of
garded in favour of production and distribution. communication goods and services.
Consumption was seen as unproblematic because hese relationships have been little explored,
it was either considered to be based upon rational especially on a comparative and diachronic basis,
individuals buying goods to maximise their satis- and require once again the return of communi-
faction or seen as determined by production aims. cations and media research to some of the key
Digital media individualised cultural production concepts and concerns of their parent disciplines
and consumption. Focusing on the consumption in the social sciences. If we are to understand the
of culture rather than exclusively on production connection between structural inequalities and
points to the importance of diverse uses of mass- communication practices we need to re-import into
produced cultural goods and experiences in which communications research some of these classical
mass-produced commodities can be customised and concerns with structural inequalities.
‘localised’ rather than ‘globalised’. Investigating
new trends in cultural production and consump- 5. How and under what circumstances does
tion across the world is necessary to be able to build mediatisation hinder or contribute to new –
the future policies needed to promote creation and democratic or anti-democratic – forms of
access to knowledge. In addition to studies of inter- political participation?
pretative aspects of cultural consumption, the study Media research has given much attention in recent
of the relationship between cultural production and years to the concept and meaning of mediatisation.
consumption should take into account the wider he core of competing deinitions and approaches
social, economic and political context in which cul- is a focus on the extent to which the media have
tural products are being produced and consumed become central to political life, and indeed have
– globally, regionally and nationally as well as locally. become so important to the political institutions
and practices of a society that they are intrinsic to
them. In that sense, the term ‘saturation’ is oten 7. How do new uses of communication
associated with discussions of mediatisation, imply- technologies articulate with bodily experience,
ing that the media have advanced to a point where for example in the domains of healthcare,
major, especially political processes, are unthinkable education, art, gaming culture and fashion?
or even impossible without them. his process is he profusion of digital technologies enables con-
common in most European societies, with evidence sumers to transform and communicate their bodies
of increasing disengagement from traditional politi- across time and space (e.g. digital characters in a
cal processes, such as voting and party membership, virtual world that consumers can create and cus-
especially among the young, with only sketchy evi- tomise, such as avatars in ‘Second Life’), to ‘move’
dence that such engagement is migrating to newer beyond their physical location and to establish a
and diferent forms of political activity or commu- sense of shared presence among separate individu-
nication. als or members of a group (telepresence, for example,
Research is needed that takes forward some by cell phones or video conferencing), and even to
of these debates to understand the dynamics of ‘merge’ their bodies with technological tools (e.g.
democratic action and participation. We have sel- pacemakers). hese interactions reveal a complex
dom gone beyond the aggregate data of political negotiation occurring at the boundary between the
mobilisation and action to understand more fun- body and technology. hey challenge the formerly-
damentally how democracies may be changing, if prevailing assumptions in explaining consumers’
indeed they are, with the widespread adoption of construction of online identities suggesting that a 39
media both for political communication between simple dichotomy exists between the online self and
marks) is often compared to physical property and communication technology, modes of informa-
rights but knowledge or ‘immaterial products’ are tion and codes of communication play a leading role
fundamentally diferent. Intellectual property can in human afairs by assigning media users speciic
be bought and sold, but should it be considered a roles, structuring what they see and say, and speci-
commodity like other goods that can be bought fying what they are permitted or expected to do.
and/or sold? Together with labour, land and money, his (sot) deterministic perspective of how media
which Polanyi (1944) described as ‘ictitious’ com- technologies may shape human demands of sus-
modities, intellectual property belongs to the world tainability should be supplemented by questioning
of commodities which are unsustainable within a the social conditions that help to shape the ways in
self-regulating market system and thus necessitates which the available communication technologies
speciic ‘protection’ and regulation. In contrast to will be used, and inluence the direction in which
Polanyi’s ‘ictitious commodities’, however, immate- they will be developed and changed.
rial intellectual products can only become proitable
commodities with government intervention. he 11. What are the prospects, problems and
technological developments of the digital age might potentials of European and other transnational
raise expectations that, in industries where the identities in a context of increasingly complex
basic production equipment is widely afordable, global media lows?
an increased cultural production by people work- In a situation of increasingly complex and multi-
ing outside the ‘creative industries’ will lead to a levelled global media lows, there is a need to better
more equitable distribution of economic assets understand social, cultural, political and economic
in the development of the creative economy. his, impacts that the social dynamics of transnational
however, is challenged by evidence that inequality groupings have on their members and on others.
and social exclusion persist. here may be greater hey are emerging as key players in globalisation
opportunities to become content creators but the processes, which are largely decentred from speciic
means of storage and mass distribution for proit national territories and take place in a global space,
are dominated by globalised companies. How the in contrast to transnationalisation processes, which
difering interests of the original creators, the inter- transcend one or more nation states but are still
mediaries (producers, publishers) and the end-users anchored in one or a limited number of them (such
(consumers, citizens) should be balanced globally as transnational corporations). Globalisation fosters
and regionally as well as nationally in this new envi- a re-organisation and re-negotiation of nationally-
ronment is still unclear. framed identities and creation of transnational
identities, supranational institutions and global
networks of interaction that facilitate international
cooperation and global governance, but it also faces
the growing emergence of multiple identities such as
ethnic, religious, linguistic, environmental and gen-
der identities. In order to understand the complexity
of these processes, it is essential to understand not
only what identities are but also from where those
identities are derived and how they relate to the ‘oth-
erness’ inherent in identity construction. How social
identities are shaped by transnational interaction
(e.g. changing the balance between transnational/
European, national and sub-national identiications)
is an important area of investigation.
Box 3
he ECREA European Media and Communi-
cation Doctoral Summer School which started
in 1992 is now a joint project of 22 European
universities and the European Communication
Research and Education Association (ECREA).
Between 20 and 50 students in the mid-stage
of their PhD projects have participated
each year in the summer school in Grenoble
(1992–96), Madrid (1997), Lund (1998), Lon-
don (1999–2003), Tampere/Helsinki (2004),
Tartu (2005–2009), Ljubljana (2010–2012) and
46 Bremen (2013– ). In 2006, the Summer School
launched its own book series (he Research-
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Sampling digital music and culture. Cambridge, Expect More rom Technology and Less rom Each
MA: he MIT Press. Other. New York: Basic Books.
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Culture. London: Sage. Media, Representations, Identities. Bristol:
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Peter, Macaulay, Linda and Doherty, Joanne divide shits to gaps of usage. Phoenix, Arizona,
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Annexes
49
• Dr Sergio Sparviero
ICT&S – Center for Advanced Studies and Research
in ICTs and Society, Faculty of Communication
Science, University of Salzburg, Austria
• Professor Nurcay Turkoglu
ILAD-Communications Research Association
(ILAD-Iletisim Arastirmalari Dernegi), Istanbul, Turkey
• Mr Mathy Vanbuel
ATiT (Audiovisual Technologies, Informatics
& Telecommunications), Roosbeek, Belgium
• Dr Ausra Vinciuniene
Public Communications, Vytautas Magnus
University, Kaunas, Lithuania
• Mr Manfred Werfel
WAN-IFRA (World Association of Newspapers
and News Publishers.), Paris, France
• Ms Erika Widegren 55
The Permanent Platform of Atomium Culture,