Tekijänoikeuden erikoiskirjasto

Regional and local broadcasting in Europe
Muistilista on tyhjä
Vis
Nimeke- ja vastuullisuusmerkintö
  • Regional and local broadcasting in Europe
Julkaistu
  • European Audiovisual Observatory, Strasbourg : 2016.
Ulkoasutiedot
  • 119 s.
Sarjamerkintö ei-lisäkirjausmuodossa
  • IRIS Special ;
Huomautus sisällöstä, tiivistelmä tms.
  • The structure of this study explores the following questions: What is the role of regional and local media in Europe? How is this role promoted by the actions and legal instruments of the Council of Europe? What are the national specific trends and developments in Europe on a country-by-country basis? Where does the future of regional and local media in Europe lie? Regional and local broadcast media in Europe may appear for many as a last bastion of plurality, of vox populi and of democracy. The European Audiovisual Observatory, part of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, has just published a brand new IRIS Special analysis of the current state of regional and local broadcasting in Europe This latest Observatory publication is based on research led by Ronan Ó Fathaigh, Tarlach McGonagle and Nico van Eijk, from the IViR of Amsterdam. It is composed of special contributions by media experts such as Elda Brogi, Jean-François Furnémont, Oliver Gerber, Gianna Iacino, Marc Janssen, Deirdre Kevin, Alina Ostling, Francesca Pellicanò, Benjamin Selier and Sophie Valais. This new report offers a much-needed overview of regional audiovisual media in Europe in three sections. Section I delivers a broad overview of current national developments and reforms in recent years Section II the second digs deeper into individual national case studies of regional and local media – their distinctive features and regulatory approaches Section III looks into the future of regional and local broadcasting. Content list Part 1 - Overview 1. Introduction 1.1. The importance of regional audiovisual media 1.1.1. Terminology 1.2. Council of Europe framework 1.2.1. European Convention on Human Rights 1.2.2. Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (FCNM) 1.2.3. The European Charter on Regional or Minority Languages (ECRML) 1.2.4. Non-treaty-based standard-setting 1.2.4.1. Committee of Ministers 1.2.4.2. Parliamentary Assembly 1.2.4.3. Congress of Local and Regional Authorities 1.3. Structure of publication 2. Current national developments 2.1. United Kingdom: creating a regional audiovisual framework 2.1.1. Independent production exemptions 2.1.2. Media-ownership rules 2.2. Flexibility and funding 2.2.1. Switzerland 2.2.2. Spain 2.2.3. Germany 2.3. Consolidation and efficiency 2.3.1. The Netherlands 2.3.2. Portugal 2.4. Advertising and regional windows 2.4.1. Germany 2.4.2. Russian Federation 2.5. Must carry and the digital switchover 2.5.1. Romania 2.5.2. Russian Federation 2.5.3. France 2.5.4. The Netherlands: must-carry exemptions 2.6. Italy: frequency allocation 2.7. Closures 2.8. Conclusion 3. Regional and local pluralism: the Media Pluralism Monitor tool and the results of the 2015 implementation 3.1. Introducing the Media Pluralism Monitor (MPM) 3.2. The MPM2015 approach to regional and local media 3.3. The MPM2015 analysis on regional and local media 3.3.1. Legal safeguards and support measures for regional and local media 3.3.2 The role of the PSM 3.4. The new version of the MPM in 2016 3.5. Conclusion 4. Regional and local television in Europe: a vast and varied panorama 4.1. The varied nature of public regional broadcasting in Europe 4.1.1. Distinct regional public broadcasting companies 4.1.2. Associated regional public broadcasting companies 4.1.3. National public broadcaster with sub-units for languages 4.1.4. Specific language channels (associated with specific regions) 4.1.5. Regional public service channels of the national public broadcasters 4.1.6. Regional (broadcast) windows of national public broadcasters 4.1.7. Regional studios of national public broadcasters as production centres 4.2. The private side of regional and local television Part 2 – Regional and local broadcasting in selected countries 5. Germany 5.1. General Introduction 5.2. Regulatory Framework 5.2.1. Regional window programmes 5.2.2. Regional advertising 5.2.3. Opt-out clause 5.2.4. Platform occupancy 5.3. Market Overview 5.4. Recent developments 5.4.1. Federal Administrative Court’s decision on regional advertising and its consequences 5.4.2. Regional windows: procedural rules and constitutionality 5.5. Current and future challenges 6. Italy 6.1. General introduction 6.2. The legal framework: the “local scope” and the fundamental principle of the local media activity 6.3. Regulatory overview, the market, and the financing of the sector 6.4. A specific aspect of the Italian system: the “regional public service broadcasting” 6.5. Recent developments 6.6. Conclusions 7. The Netherlands 7.1. General introduction 7.2. Regulatory framework 7.3. Market overview 7.4. Specific issues regarding regional public broadcasting in the Netherlands 7.5. Recent developments 7.6. Concluding remarks 8. France 8.1. General introduction 8.2. Regulatory aspects concerning regional and local channels 8.2.1. Authorisation procedures 8.2.2. The regional public service offer 8.2.3. Local variations of the national channels 8.2.4. Local channels operated by local authorities 8.2.5. Arrangements to counter concentration 8.2.6. Regulation of content and advertising 8.2.7. The must-carry obligation incumbent on local public-sector channels 8.3. The local and regional television landscape in France 8.3.1. Overview 8.3.2. Characteristics of the regional and local channels 8.3.3. Income and economic viability 8.3.4. France 3 8.4. Final comments 9. Spain 9.1. General introduction 9.2. Regulatory framework 9.3. Market overview 9.4. Specific issues 9.5. Recent developments 9.6. Current and future challenges 10. Switzerland 10.1. Introduction 10.2. Legal parameters 10.2.1. The broadcasting remit in the Federal Constitution 10.2.2. Legislation of regional public service TV 10.2.2.1. Typology of broadcasters in the law 10.2.2.2. Award of a concession 10.2.2.3. Regional remit with input and output criteria 10.2.2.4. Right to a share of broadcast-reception licence fees (fee-splitting) 10.2.2.5. Coverage areas 10.2.2.6. Must-carry privilege 10.2.2.7. Supervision 10.3. Challenges 10.4. Ongoing developments 10.4.1. More fee-splitting 10.4.2. Relaxing the advertising rules 10.4.3. Subsidised subtitling 10.4.4. Promotion of digitisation 10.4.5. Relaxation of the rules on competitive concentration 10.4.6. Abolition of the regional restriction on distribution 10.5. Outlook 10.5.1. Public service broadcasting and imminent renewal of concessions 10.5.2. Success through co-operation? 11. United Kingdom 11.1. General introduction 11.2. Regulatory framework 11.3. Market overview 11.4. Specific issues 11.5. Recent developments 11.6. Current and future challenges Part 3 – The future of regional and local broadcasting 12. Viable local and regional television channels 12.1. Introduction 12.2. Hostile economic context 12.3. Unfavourable developments in consumption modes 12.4. Grounds for optimism 12.5. The absence of a model 12.6. Conclusion: determining elements 13. Concluding remarks
Asiasana - Kontrolloimaton
Henkilönnimi
  • Brogi, Elda.
  • van Eijk, Nico.
  • Ó Fathaigh, Ronan.
  • Furnémont, Jean-François.
  • Gerber, Oliver.
  • Iacino, Gianna.
  • Janssen, Marc.
  • Kevin, Deirdre.
  • McGonagle, Tarlach.
  • Ostling, Alina.
  • Pellicanò, Francesca.
  • Selier, Benjamin.
  • Valais, Sophie.
Sarjalisäkirjaus - yhtenäistetty nimeke
  • IRIS Special ;
Elektronisen aineiston sijainti ja käyttö (URI)
  • https://rm.coe.int/regional-and-local-broadcasting-in-europe/1680789635.pdf Linkki verkkoaineistoon
ISBN
  • 978-92-871-8342-2
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*24500$aRegional and local broadcasting in Europe /$cElda Brogi, Nico van Eijk, Ronan Ó Fathaigh, Jean-Francois Furnémont, Oliver Gerber, Gianna Iacino, Marc Janssen, Deirdre Kevin, Tarlach McGonagle, Alina Ostling, Francesca Pellicanò, Benjamin Selier, Sophie Valais.
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*520  $aThe structure of this study explores the following questions:  What is the role of regional and local media in Europe? How is this role promoted by the actions and legal instruments of the Council of Europe? What are the national specific trends and developments in Europe on a country-by-country basis? Where does the future of regional and local media in Europe lie?  Regional and local broadcast media in Europe may appear for many as a last bastion of plurality, of vox populi and of democracy. The European Audiovisual Observatory, part of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, has just published a brand new IRIS Special analysis of the current state of regional and local broadcasting in Europe   This latest Observatory publication is based on research led by Ronan Ó Fathaigh, Tarlach McGonagle and Nico van Eijk, from the IViR of Amsterdam. It is composed of special contributions by media experts such as Elda Brogi, Jean-François Furnémont, Oliver Gerber, Gianna Iacino, Marc Janssen, Deirdre Kevin, Alina Ostling, Francesca Pellicanò, Benjamin Selier and Sophie Valais.  This new report offers a much-needed overview of regional audiovisual media in Europe in three sections.  Section I delivers a broad overview of current national developments and reforms in recent years  Section II the second digs deeper into individual national case studies of regional and local media – their distinctive features and regulatory approaches  Section III looks into the future of regional and local broadcasting.  Content list    Part 1 - Overview     1. Introduction  1.1. The importance of regional audiovisual media  1.1.1. Terminology  1.2. Council of Europe framework  1.2.1. European Convention on Human Rights  1.2.2. Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (FCNM)  1.2.3. The European Charter on Regional or Minority Languages (ECRML)  1.2.4. Non-treaty-based standard-setting  1.2.4.1. Committee of Ministers  1.2.4.2. Parliamentary Assembly  1.2.4.3. Congress of Local and Regional Authorities  1.3. Structure of publication     2. Current national developments  2.1. United Kingdom: creating a regional audiovisual framework  2.1.1. Independent production exemptions  2.1.2. Media-ownership rules  2.2. Flexibility and funding  2.2.1. Switzerland  2.2.2. Spain  2.2.3. Germany  2.3. Consolidation and efficiency  2.3.1. The Netherlands  2.3.2. Portugal  2.4. Advertising and regional windows  2.4.1. Germany  2.4.2. Russian Federation  2.5. Must carry and the digital switchover  2.5.1. Romania  2.5.2. Russian Federation  2.5.3. France  2.5.4. The Netherlands: must-carry exemptions  2.6. Italy: frequency allocation  2.7. Closures  2.8. Conclusion     3. Regional and local pluralism: the Media Pluralism Monitor tool and the results of the 2015 implementation  3.1. Introducing the Media Pluralism Monitor (MPM)  3.2. The MPM2015 approach to regional and local media  3.3. The MPM2015 analysis on regional and local media  3.3.1. Legal safeguards and support measures for regional and local media  3.3.2 The role of the PSM  3.4. The new version of the MPM in 2016  3.5. Conclusion     4. Regional and local television in Europe: a vast and varied panorama  4.1. The varied nature of public regional broadcasting in Europe  4.1.1. Distinct regional public broadcasting companies  4.1.2. Associated regional public broadcasting companies  4.1.3. National public broadcaster with sub-units for languages  4.1.4. Specific language channels (associated with specific regions)  4.1.5. Regional public service channels of the national public broadcasters  4.1.6. Regional (broadcast) windows of national public broadcasters  4.1.7. Regional studios of national public broadcasters as production centres  4.2. The private side of regional and local television     Part 2 – Regional and local broadcasting in selected countries     5. Germany  5.1. General Introduction  5.2. Regulatory Framework  5.2.1. Regional window programmes  5.2.2. Regional advertising  5.2.3. Opt-out clause  5.2.4. Platform occupancy  5.3. Market Overview  5.4. Recent developments  5.4.1. Federal Administrative Court’s decision on regional advertising and its consequences  5.4.2. Regional windows: procedural rules and constitutionality  5.5. Current and future challenges     6. Italy  6.1. General introduction  6.2. The legal framework: the “local scope” and the fundamental principle of the local media activity  6.3. Regulatory overview, the market, and the financing of the sector  6.4. A specific aspect of the Italian system: the “regional public service broadcasting”  6.5. Recent developments  6.6. Conclusions     7. The Netherlands  7.1. General introduction  7.2. Regulatory framework  7.3. Market overview  7.4. Specific issues regarding regional public broadcasting in the Netherlands  7.5. Recent developments  7.6. Concluding remarks     8. France  8.1. General introduction  8.2. Regulatory aspects concerning regional and local channels  8.2.1. Authorisation procedures  8.2.2. The regional public service offer  8.2.3. Local variations of the national channels  8.2.4. Local channels operated by local authorities  8.2.5. Arrangements to counter concentration  8.2.6. Regulation of content and advertising  8.2.7. The must-carry obligation incumbent on local public-sector channels  8.3. The local and regional television landscape in France  8.3.1. Overview  8.3.2. Characteristics of the regional and local channels  8.3.3. Income and economic viability  8.3.4. France 3  8.4. Final comments     9. Spain                 9.1. General introduction  9.2. Regulatory framework  9.3. Market overview  9.4. Specific issues  9.5. Recent developments  9.6. Current and future challenges     10. Switzerland  10.1. Introduction  10.2. Legal parameters  10.2.1. The broadcasting remit in the Federal Constitution  10.2.2. Legislation of regional public service TV  10.2.2.1. Typology of broadcasters in the law  10.2.2.2. Award of a concession  10.2.2.3. Regional remit with input and output criteria  10.2.2.4. Right to a share of broadcast-reception licence fees (fee-splitting)  10.2.2.5. Coverage areas  10.2.2.6. Must-carry privilege  10.2.2.7. Supervision  10.3. Challenges  10.4. Ongoing developments  10.4.1. More fee-splitting  10.4.2. Relaxing the advertising rules  10.4.3. Subsidised subtitling  10.4.4. Promotion of digitisation  10.4.5. Relaxation of the rules on competitive concentration  10.4.6. Abolition of the regional restriction on distribution  10.5. Outlook  10.5.1. Public service broadcasting and imminent renewal of concessions  10.5.2. Success through co-operation?     11. United Kingdom  11.1. General introduction  11.2. Regulatory framework  11.3. Market overview  11.4. Specific issues  11.5. Recent developments  11.6. Current and future challenges     Part 3 – The future of regional and local broadcasting     12. Viable local and regional television channels  12.1. Introduction  12.2. Hostile economic context  12.3. Unfavourable developments in consumption modes  12.4. Grounds for optimism  12.5. The absence of a model  12.6. Conclusion: determining elements     13. Concluding remarks
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