ABSTRACT

The book studies the current trends of foreign correspondence in Europe. The EU’s expansion has had abundant effects on news coverage and some of the European capitals have become home to the biggest international press corps in world. So, who are these "professional strangers" stationed in Europe and how do they try to make their stories, that are clearly important in today’s interconnected world, interesting for viewers and readers?

This book represents the first Pan-European study of foreign correspondents and their reporting. It includes chapters from 27 countries, and it aims to study them and the direction, flow and pattern of their coverage, as well as answer questions regarding the impact of new technologies on the quantity, frequency and speed of their coverage. Do more sophisticated communications tools yield better international news coverage of Europe? Or does the audience’s increasing apathy and the downsizing of the foreign bureaus offset these advances? And how do the seemingly unstoppable media trends of convergence, commercialization, concentration, and globalization affect the way Europe and individual European countries are reported?

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Foreign Correspondents in Perspective

chapter 1|11 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Austria

Vienna: a Central and Eastern Europe-base in Transition

chapter 2|17 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Belgium

Brussels Correspondents' Struggle to Make the Important Interesting

chapter 3|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Bulgaria

News from the Eastern Frontier of the European Union

chapter 4|13 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Cyprus

Tacking between Tradition and Change

chapter 5|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in the Czech Republic

Coping with Social Transition and Financial Crisis

chapter 6|13 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Denmark

All Quiet on the Northern News Front?

chapter 7|7 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Estonia

Representatives of the Nordic-Baltic region

chapter 8|7 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Finland

News from the Fringe of Europe

chapter 9|12 pages

Foreign Correspondents in France

From Prestige Status to Changing Practices and Complex Perspectives

chapter 11|10 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Greece

Facing the ‘Communication Deficit'

chapter 12|11 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Hungary

Local, Glocal, Global Agendas

chapter 13|12 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Ireland

Close Neighbours, Global Agenda

chapter 14|11 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Latvia

Can a Small Country Have Big News?

chapter 15|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Lithuania

Between Glorious Past and Miserable Future

chapter 16|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Malta

Peculiarities of a Small Nation State

chapter 17|12 pages

Foreign Correspondents in The Netherlands

Anything That Would Be of Interest for Our Readers 1

chapter 18|11 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Norway

Covering a Small, Rich Country near the Arctic

chapter 19|10 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Portugal

News from Portugal:Thanks to the Debt Crisis

chapter 20|12 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Serbia

What Happens When a War Ends?

chapter 21|10 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Slovakia

Economy, Minorities, and Sometimes Politics

chapter 22|8 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Slovenia

A Small Country Neglected by Foreign Media

chapter 23|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Spain

Facing the Economic and Professional Crisis

chapter 24|9 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Sweden

Professional Challenges and Strategies of Domestication

chapter 25|10 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Switzerland

Hard News, No Chocolate

chapter 26|10 pages

Foreign Correspondents in Turkey

Between the Home and Host Agendas

chapter 27|16 pages

Foreign Correspondents in the UK

London: A City ‘Bathed in Light'

chapter |17 pages

Conclusions

The ‘Professional Strangers' of Europe at the Dawn of the 21st Century

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue