2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11616-021-00683-y
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Media in Croatia: from freedom fighters to tabloid avengers

Abstract: The article provides an overview of the Croatian media landscape and its transformation that has been driven by the processes of democratization, commercialization and digitalization.The main media-related concerns from 1990 to 2000 were freedom of the press, autonomy of journalism and censorship. The liberalization of the media market that started in 2000, led to proliferation of media outlets and galloping commercialization of media ownership and content. The next big change came with digitalization that fun… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Climate anxiety has been linked to depressive symptoms as well as reduced mental health and psychological well-being [61][62][63][64][65]. To counteract these negative effects, media can shift the focus of climate change information away from potential impacts to potential The lack of a significant relationship between exposure to climate change information in modern media and proenvironmental behavior in our sample likely reflects Croats' lack of trust in social media and online news, due in part to concerns about misinformation and disinformation [38]. This mistrust is understandable in light of the sensationalist tone with which topics in climate change have recently been covered in online news portals in the country [66].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Climate anxiety has been linked to depressive symptoms as well as reduced mental health and psychological well-being [61][62][63][64][65]. To counteract these negative effects, media can shift the focus of climate change information away from potential impacts to potential The lack of a significant relationship between exposure to climate change information in modern media and proenvironmental behavior in our sample likely reflects Croats' lack of trust in social media and online news, due in part to concerns about misinformation and disinformation [38]. This mistrust is understandable in light of the sensationalist tone with which topics in climate change have recently been covered in online news portals in the country [66].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…These mechanisms contribute to the diffusion of the understanding of a risk, both among individuals directly impacted and within the broader society [31]. In the Croatian context, traditional media such as radio and television are reported to enjoy a higher level of trust than modern media such as social networks [38].…”
Section: Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If we accept the notion that democracy requires free media to be a watchdog which holds government accountable to the people and speaks truth to the power, then citizens' trust to media is one of the pillars of democratic sustainability. Although Croatian media landscape struggles with some specific issues, including the low trust to traditional media and unusually high trust to social media, its role of social corrective is undisputed (Grbeša and Volarevic , 2021). Therefore, in the light of previously obtained results from our model, and the trust in representative institutions, we consider the trust in media as a partial proxy for support for democracy and corrective to nationalist authoritarianism.…”
Section: Constructing the Full Modelmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Recently, though, this field has been increasingly marked by demand -side phenomenon analysis, with an emphasis on attitudes at the individual level. This type of study has not yet been made in Croatia, and it seems necessary given that populism in Croatian society is an omnipresent part of political discourse and media narratives (Grbeša -Volarević 2021). As Grbeša and Šalaj (2018) put it, the analysis of populism in Croatia is mostly placed in the framework of daily political comments, with a more comprehensive study yet to be undertaken at the individual level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%