Reporting the EU. News, media and the European Institutions

Author (Person) ,
Publisher
Publication Date 2014
ISBN 978-17-845306-55
Content Type

In recent years, media coverage of the European Union has faced its most serious test. The interlinked crises in the Union have severely tested the expertise of the EU press corps, many of whom have struggled to cope with its complexities, and have thrown into sharper relief the differences among the national coverages. At the same time, the crises have deepened trends towards euro scepticism in many EU member states - thus putting pressure on correspondents to be more sceptical, analytical, argumentative and even hostile, in their reporting. This development has revealed a greater gulf between reporters - who are now more sceptical than their predecessors - and the press service and officials of the EU, who remain strongly committed to the narrative of an 'ever-closer union'. Yet - in contrast to the rising euro scepticism - the crises have emphasised the need perceived by European officials and many European politicians for deeper integration, at least among Euro currency members, to cope with the crisis.

This book, based on extensive interviews with EU correspondents, editors, public relations and other EU executives, will reveal for the first time how this powerful group of institutions at the heart of the Union are covered - or are not covered. The analysis and critique of the present coverage also carries a series of recommendations on how it might be made to better serve the citizens of the EU members. The authors highlight the structural and historic difficulties in covering a multinational institution, and the struggle - generally unsuccessful - to develop a journalism which can fully hold the institutions to account, and find an audience which goes beyond the narrow circles of professionals and politicians who are closely concerned with the business of the Union.

Contents:

1. Introduction: Feast and Famine
2. The Limits of Utopia: Leaving Loyalty, Embracing Scepticism
3. Communicating to the Communicators: How the EU Presents Itself
4. Growing Apart: The Argument over Objectivity
5. The Limits: The EU from 'Dull' to 'Crucial' in a Time of Crisis
6. Living in Financial Times: Getting to Grips with Financial Complexity
7. Video Games: The Challenges for TV Journalists and the Role of 'Mass' Media
8. Absent Enemies: Reporting on Brussels out of Brussels
9. The Globalists: Reporting for the Elite
10. Dog Does Eat Dog: Peer Pressure and Peer Reviews
11. Tweeting into Clarity: Online is Demanding, but Helpful
12. The Next Act: Journalism in a Time of Polemics

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