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                                                                                        Review Article




                      Corrent Trends in Media Research

                                                 JUHA HERKMAN




    In today's eraof extensivespecialisation  researchers
                                                      cornrnunication   technologyas well as fue econornics
    tend to know little about other approaches    than that
                                                      of communicationinsofar as fuesesubjectswere re-
    of their own expertise. Conceptions of research   lated to media research. The project not only
    fields are often based more on personal and com-  mapped academic media and communication re-
    mon assumptionsthanknowledgeproducedby em-         search but algo, insofar as possible, research by
    pirical analyses.This article tries to clarify fue em-
                                                       governmental institutions, prívate agencies and
    pirical reality of media research summarisingfue
                                      by              media companies.The findings were based on data
    results of the project 'Mapping Media and Com-    concemingyears2005-2006,by and large, although
    munication Research',which exarninedthecontents   a few of the sub-projectshave sample data from a
    and trends of current media and communicationre-   longerperiod and algo a more historical perspective
    search in seven countries: Finland, the United     on the changesand continuities in media and com-
    States,Germany, France, Japan,Estonia and Aus-     munication researchin a target country (e.g., Ger-
    tralia. The project was funded by the Helsingin    many,France and Japan).The gathering and analy-
    SanomatFoundation and carried out by the Com-     gis of the data were carried out during autumn2006
    munication ResearchCentre (CRC, University of     and spring 2007.
     Helsinki) during a nine-month period betweenau-      The project team agreed on the researchques-
    tumn 2006 and spring 2007.1The purpose of the      tions, the researchprincipIes and the structure of
    project was to produce an overview of media-re-   reports in advance in order to enhancemeaningful
    lated research,in connection~with launch of the
                                         the           comparison among the countries. Thus, the basic
    Foundation, but at the same time it offered a rafequestionsand methods behind each country report
    opportunity to outline the similarities and differ-arethe same.The most important part of each sub-
    ences among academic approaches in the above-      project was the interview study of key persons in
    mentionedcountries.                               media and cornrnunicationresearch.In all, 186 ex-
        The project's main researchquestionswere the  perts were interviewed (seeTable 1). Only the Ger-
    following:                                         man sub-project wa~based mainly on analysis of
                                                       written sources(Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 5).
    1. What kinds of media and communication re-          The interviews produced data, not only facts
       searchare carried out in each specific country  about media and communication research in each
       and who is doing fue research?                  country, but algo evaluations and visions of the
    2. How do different approaches relate to each state and future of suchresearch.The project team
       other?                                         members together decided on the organisation,
                                                      themesand questions for the interviews. In all, the
    3. What is the relationship between researchand data of the project consists of secondarydata from
       the media industries?                          previous studiesand existing statistics and primary
    4. In which direction is researchheadedin the fu- data from interviews with key personsin media and
       luce?                                           communicationresearchas well as some statistical
                                                       analysesmade by fue country teamsthemselves.
    The focus of fue project was on media research,
                                                  but      At first glance the task of mapping the current
    the researchers algo took into account studies in  state of media and communicationresearchin large
    speechcornrnunication,organisationalcornrnunica- countries suchas the U.S., Japan,France and Ger-
    tion, public relations, researchand developmentof  many looked like 'a rnissionimpossible'. It is clear



                                                                                                      145
Tablel.     Expertslnterviewedfor 'Mapping Media and Communication
                                                                 Research'

                 Finland     Estonla     Germany      Franca            U.S.       Japan      Australia      N=

AII                 32          22          12             19            40          37          24          186
Academy             16           9         11              16            35          14           18         119
Olher               16          13           1             3              5          23            6           67
Men                 20          13           7             12            31          30           19         132            ~
Women               12          ~            5             7              9           7           5            54           :,
                                                                                                                             j

 Ihat this kind of short-termproject cannotreveal all-           of countries indicates the interests of the Founda-
inclusive or completeknowledgeof an issueascom-                  tion, which is no doubt interested in 'new innova-
 plex as media and communication researchin any                 tive media markets' in South Korea and Japan,the
country. Eventhe definitions of the key conceptsof               'world's leading media market' -Ihe U.S. -various
 'media research'and 'communicationresearch'vary                examples of the 'Old World' (France, Germany,
 in different contexts which, in tum, has a multitude            Great Britain), and the relationship of these coun-
 of effects on research  institutions and disciplines in        tries to the 'domestic context' (Finland) and its
the countries studied. Thus, each country createsa              close neighbour(Estonia).
unique context for media and communication re-                      VariationsamongIhe countriesalgoproved to be
search.Furthermore,the nationalmedia statistics as              interesting from the academicpoint of view. Differ-
 well asthe statisticalanalyses   usedas a background           encesin size,languages,      societies,culturesand poli-
 in country-specific sub-projectsare often based on             cies in eachcountry made for an unusual combina-
data and methods that are not directly comparable                tion and forced the researchers Ihink about their
                                                                                                    to
to eacholher.                                                   positions as researchers a newway. Academic re-
                                                                                            in
    As a result, this article will not provide statisti-         searchnowadaysis remarkably specialisedand re-
 caUycomparableknowledge aboutmedia and com-                    searchers tend to know little about approaches
 munication researchin the target countries. More-               other than their own, even in their borne country -
 over, it may not be possible to make broad conclu-              not to speak of approaches in other countries or
sions from Ihe qualitative comparisonsbetweenthe                continents. 'Mapping Media and Communication
countries. The goal of the article is simply to pro-            Research' can therefore help media scholarsto 10-
vide a general overview of the current media and                cate themselvesin the broadercontext of the whole
 communicationresearch Ihe countriesstudiedand
                           in                                   field of research.
to compare the countries descriptively rather than                  This article adopts the structure used in coun-          I
analyticaUy.The comparisonhere is based mainly                  try-specific reports. Therefore, the four main sec-          ¡
on the country-specific sub-reports of 'Mapping                 tions are: 1) The media landscapes, 2) Main re-               j
Media and Communication Research', but in                       searchinstitutions and organisations, 3) Main ap-
contextualising the project, the article algo draws             proachesin media and communicationresearch,          and
upon olher references.2                                         4) Future challenges to research. In the country-
    It rnight be asked why Iheseparticular countries            specific reports eachsectionwas consideredmainly
were included in the project. The targetcountriesdo             from a nationalperspective.In Ibis paperthe goalis
not constitute any homogenous group, quite the                  to clarify Ihe sirnilarities in researchtraditions in ad-
contrary. They are located far from one another,                dition to identifying national characteristics. The
Ihey represent   various languages culturesand in
                                     and                        first section then outlines the contexts -the struc-
somecasestheir connectionsto media and commu-                   tures of the media market, media and communica-
nication researchdo not appear self evident. The                tion legislation, and media consumption-and indi-
choise ?f target countries ,,:,as.  originaUy made by           c.ateswhere the resear~hin ea~h country i~ posi-            ~
the proJect's sponsor,Helsrngrn SanomatFounda-                  tloned. The second sectlonconsldersIhe marn aca-            ,
tion. The Foundation has algo funded the same                   demic and non-academicresearchorganisationsin
kinds of projects for SoulhKorea and GreatBritain.              each country, and the third section focuses on the
Those projects are being carried out at the Univer-             contentsand trends in mediaand communicationre-
sity of Jyvaskyla, and they are not included in this            search.These sections are based on data gathered
summarybecausetheir results were not yet avail-                 by interviews as well as data from quantitative
able at the time of writing this article. The selection         analysesmade either by the researchteams or by



146
earlier researchers.
                   The fourth section summarises        tion and distribution but also mediapolicies and leg-
the views of the experts interviewed on the future      islation in the targetcountries (e.g., Valaskivi 2007,
challengesand developmentsof media and cornmu-          23-24; Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 11-12). Conver-
nicationresearch.                                       genceand its consequences media markets,con-
                                                                                      for
                                                        tent and communication policies have been much
              .discussed                                            in many countries since the early 1990s
The MedIa Landscapes                                    (see Baldwin et al. 1996; Küng et al. 1999; Marsden
One task of the project was to map the structures       & Verhulst 1999; Hassan 2000; Murdock 2000;
ofmedia landscapes fue targetcountries.This ob-
                      in                                Iosifidis 2002; Lowe & Hujanen2003).
jective was emphasised    especiallyiffthe caseof Ja-
 pan becausethe Japanese    context is the most unfa-  2) Concentration of media ownership was an issue
 miliar from a Europeanpoint of view. Becausethe       that carne up in one way or another in every target
 target countries are remarkably divergent, it was     country. Most evident was the historical concentra-
 not easyto find dimensions in the various media       tion of the press (e.g., Puustinen 2007, 18;
 landscapesthat are clearly comparable. Neverthe-      Rahkonen2007, 25-31), but it was clear that cross-
 less,the connectionsof the media and communica-       media ownership and conglomerateshave also be-
 tion industriesto the so-called globalisationprocess  come more and more common in every target coun-
 reveals at leastthree interrelated but possibly con-  try during the past few decades(e.g.,Aslama et al.
 tradictory tendenciesthat link the target countries'  2007,22-23; Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 15-16;
 media landscapes,   namely: 1)changesin media and     Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 8). Another tendencyhas
  communication technologies, 2) concentration of      beenfue globalisation, or at leastthe internationali-
 media ownership, and 3) the ideal of a diverse or     sation, of media corporations. This tendency has
 pluralistic public sphere.                            not only occurred in the homelandsof the world's
                                                       biggest media corporations (e.g., the U.S., Japan,
 1)In eachtarget country it has beenclear for several Germanyand France),but also in smallercountries
years that fue diffusion of fue Internet, online com- and media markets suchas Finland and Estonia. For
munication and mobile technology challengesthe         example,the Finnish company SanomaWSOYwas
'old media' in various ways. First, 'old media' have the largest media company in the Nordic countries
beendigitalised and fused with the Internetand mo-      until year 2007 and is also a leading magazinepub-
hile networks, asfue digitalisation of television, fue  lisher in the Benelux countries as well as in some
increasing number of web-papers and magazines, East Europeancountries. Similarly, the Norwegian
and the pilots of mobile- TV demonstrate (e.g.,         firm Schibstedand fue Swedishhouses of Bonnier
Aslama et al. 2007, 27-28, 40-42; Herkman &            and Kinnevik own substantial shares of Estonian
Viihiimaa 2007, 15-31; Valaskivi 2007,38-39). Sec- newspaper and television markets (Salovaara-
ond, technological   changeshavealsore-arranged   glo- Moring & Kallas 2007, 16, 19).Along with concen-
bal and national media markets so that the 'old         tration fueTe simultaneously-and paradoxically
                                                                     has
 media' increasinglyhave to compete with new net- -been a tendency        towards micro-level and user-gen-
 work communicationand ICT industries.                  erated content production by social networks (e.g.,
     The most immediate pressurehas beendirected Aslama et al. 2007, 16-17). According to David
towards print media, which in every target country Hesmondhalgh (2002), this trend has be en more
has lost its strengthas a media form and advertising generalamongglobalising cultural industriesduring
channel.Even thoughchanges       have not Jet beenfa- the late 1990sand early 2000s.
 tal or devastating,in every target country the press       In each country the media market could best be
is now searching for ways to maintain its audience describedas an 'oligopoly', in which the market is
 and advertising share especially in the competition mostly sharedby a few large companies(seePicard
 for younger media consumers.A good example of           1989,31-33). In most target countries there was
 this is fue New York Times Company,which on the also one media corporation that was remarkably
 one hand is one of the most traditional and recog- larger than the others and therefore undeniably led
 nised U.S newspaper houses, while on the other the competition. These corporations included, for
 hand it has successfully invested a great deal in       example,Time Warner in the U.S., Bertelsmannin
 online services.(Aslama et al. 2007, 36-38)             Germany,Vivendi in France,News Corporation in
     The third change is the technological conver-       Australia and SanomaWSOY Finland. Thesewere
                                                                                       in
 genceofbroadcastingand telecornmunication,     which the companies that were also more international
  will affect not only mediamarketsor media produc- than their local competitors. Time Warner, News



                                                                                                          147
Table2.       SomeDetails on Media Markets ofTarget Countriesin 2004-2005

                      Flnland        Estonla       Germany         France          U.S.           Japan        Australia
Largest media co.    Sanoma-      Eesti meedial Bertelsmann        Vivendi      Time Warner     Sony Co.        News Co.
                      WSOY         Schibsted
Revenue,
in US$ million        c.2,700           -22,196                    22,194          43,652        63,895*         23,859

TV viewing
Leaderin
(min/day)               169            270            226            207            491             190            187        ~
                                                                                                                              i

advertising
share("lo)          Papers
                         (55) Papera
                                   (44) Papera
                                             (45)                  TV(33)         TV (42)        TV (47)TV          (35),     ..1

* Total revenue: Sony's media revenue in 2004-2005 was 'only' 6,375 million US$. The advertising Agencies Dentsu and
Hakuhodo have higher net revenues and are larger Iban the largest 'pure' media company, the newspaper firm Yomiuri Shimbun.



Corporation, Bertelsmannand Vivendi belongedto                       However, since 9/11 and the Iraq war there has
the ten largest media companies in the world                    been widespread discussion about the 'dumbing
(Joukkoviestimet2006,333), while SanomaWSOY,                    down' and narrowing ofU.S. news content(Aslama
in terms of its net revenue, was the largest media               et al. 2007,32-34), which suggeststhat the 'liberal'
company in the Nordic countries until year 2007,                tradition might have seriousproblems with increas-
when SwedishBonnier overhauledit. It is clear that              ing news competition and its relationship to social
media industries would be evenmore concentrated                 and national interests(cf. CurTan2002). In contrast
without state regulation and legislation that pre-              to the U.S., Francehas relied on state regulation to
vents monopolisation and trusts. Among the target               guarantee the diversity of the public sphere. In
countries Estonia had a surprisingly diverse media              Francethe public sphereand freedomof expression
ownership that must have somethingto do with the                have beenlinked to national intereststo whose cul-
relative youth and small size of the Estonianmedia              tural integrity the dominance of the U.S. entertain-
market. By contrast the Japanese   media market is               ment industries, for example, is seenas a threat.
structuredquite differently and in a way that makes             This kind of 'protectionism' may in turn cause
it difficult to compareto the other ta:tgetcountries:            other problems (including for media and communi-
large advertisingagencies Japan, example,
                          in        for         also             cation research) than would a more 'liberal' ap-
have an important Tole in content production, and               proach. (Puustinen2007,11-12.)
theseagenciesare even bigger players in the media                    Since the 1990sthe dominant question in estab-
markets than 'traditional' media companies (see                 lishing a diverse and pluralistic public spherein Eu-
Valaskivi 2007, 14,30).                                         Topehas beenthe statusof public service broadcast-
                                                                ing (PSB). The liberalisationand deregulationofthe
  3) Even though there has beena drastic changeto-              media has beena growing trend in many European
 wards a market-driven or commercial media land-                 countries, not leastbecauseof an EU media policy
 scape in the target countries, there is still a strong          that has stressedeconornicvalues over a civic soci-
 argumentfor the idea of a pluralistic or diverse pub-           ety, for example,and the expandingmarkets in tel-
lic sphereas the core of a democraticsociety. How-               ecommunication   instead of in othermedia (Kaitatzi-
 ever, strategies to achieve this ideal vary from                Whitlock 1996; Jakubowicz2004). In Finland some
 country to country. For example,the U.S. has from              40 per cent of the audienceshare of public service
 the very beginning relied on commercially-based                 television has been parallel to that in Germany,
 media competition alongside objectivity as a news              France and many other EU countries (Joukko-
 standard. It is taken for granted that the less the             viestimet 2006, 338), but there has also been con-
 state regulates media, the better the result for de-            stantand lively criticism of PSB's Tolein the media
 mocracy: free news competition guaranteesdiver-                 market in Finland (Herkman & Viihamaa 2007,16-
 sity of media contentoThus, public service broad-               17). In France the state has interfered in television
 casting accounts for only two per cent of the                   operation perhaps more than in any other target
 American television audienceshare (Joukkoviesti-                country represented in the 'Mapping Media and
 met 2006,338).                                                  Communication Research' project, thanks to a




 148
media policy thatregulatesprogrammingdirectly by                       understandthe conditions necessaryfor the emer-
nationality and language(Puustinen2007, 11-12).                        gence of a well-functioning public service broad-
     It is interesting that broadcasting in Japanand                   caster'. They continue,that 'a weakness minority
                                                                                                                   is
Australia have close resemblances the European
                                       to                              programming, importantand sensitiveissuein Es-
                                                                                        an
model with their mixed systems of public service                       tonia and also in Latvia since both countries have
and private commercial networks (Valaskivi 2007,                       large Russian-speaking    communities. ...The other
18; Rahkonen2007, 22). The influence of the BBC                        major problem for public broadcastingin Estonia is
has been important all over the world in initiating                    the absenceof an independent,predictable, stable,
public broadcasting in the early twentieth century.                    and adequate system of funding' (ibid., 27). The
Also the problems of Japanese Australian PSB
                                   and                                 problemsof PSB in small countrieslike Estoniaand
 seemto be similar to Europe's. Japanesepublic                         Finland aretherefore basically problems createdby
broadcasterNHK has encountereddifficulties, ow-                        limited resources.
ing to credibility problems, political scandals,                            As the Estonian example illustrates, there are
digitalisation and financing. NHK has a 'renewal                       perhaps more country-specific differences than
program' to reducethe numberof employeesby ten                         similarities in societies,cultures,languages,  markets
per cent by the end of 2008. (Valaskivi 2007, 27.) A                   and media policies. Table 3 summarisessome na-
similar renewal programmehas been enforced, for                         tional characteristics in media landscapes of the
 example, in the Finnish public broadcasting com-                      countries included in the 'Mapping Media and
 panyYLE. Meanwhile, in the Australia report Juho                       CommunicationResearch'      project.
 Rahkonenemphasises pressure that liberalisa-
                           the                                               Television has been,and still is, the most popu-
 tion of media market places on public service                          lar medium in every target country: people spend
broadcastingin general: 'Given the neo-liberalmar-                      most of their media time watching television (see
 ket economy and the keen competition, the legiti-                      Table 2). Television has also constructed the most
 macy ofnon-commercialbroadcasting no longer
                                          can                           influential medium for publicity. In many countries
be takenfor granted' (Rahkonen2007,22-23).                              televisionhas beenthe leading medium for advertis-
      Estonia presentsan interesting exceptionamong                     ing. But if we estimate the relative status of each
the Europeantargetcountries in its relation to PSB.                      mediumin relationto media landscapes, seepro-
                                                                                                                   we
The 19 per cent channelshareof public television in                     found differences among the target countries. For
 Estonia is remarkablyless than in other European                        example, Finland and Japan even today are tradi-
 targetcountriesor the- average
                         EU          (Salovaara-Moring                  tional 'newspaper   countries' in which circulationsof
 & Kallas 2007,18-19;Joukkoviestimet      2006,338).In                  dailies per person are among the top five in the
 its strongemphasison commercialbroadcastingEs-                         world along with Norway, Swedenand Switzerland
 tonia represents typical post-communistsociety in
                    a                                                    (Joukkoviestimet  2006, 335).
 the Baltic afea, where, since the collapse of Soviet                        Even though circulation of dailies is continu-
 Unionandtheregainingof independence,       medialegis-                  ously but slowly decreasing,newspapersare still
  lation has supported a U.S. style liberal market                       by far the mostpopular channelfor massmedia ad-
 po.licy.As Salovaara-Moringand Kallas (2007, 26)                        vertising in Finland: newspapers  dominate advertis-
  put it: '... eachBaltic statedisplays a problem com-                   ing by 54 per cent of the market share, substan-
  mon to Centraland EastemEurope:a failure to fully                      tially more than television's share of 19-20 per

Table3.          SomeNational Characteristicsin Media Landscapes(2004-2005)

                     Finland           Estonia          Germany        France           U.S.             Japan             Australia'
                                                                                                                                            -
      ...
Relatlvely high      newspaper         television,      television     cinema,          television,      mobile. Iv,       television,
                                       cable-Iv                        magazines        cinema           newspaper          magazines
Relatively low       television?       print media      newspaper      newspaper,       print media?                       newspaper
                                                                        Internet
State regulation     deregulation      weak             deregulation   strong           weak             quite high        deregulation
Historical           small market,     independent in   World War 11, strong national   'world's biggest', World War 11,   small and
dimension            high tech,        1991, Russian    federal republic identity,      culture            high tech,      isolated
                     Nokia             minority                           language      industries         u-strategy      market.
                                                                                                                           conservative
 'New' media         falling behind,   in frontline,    'neweconomy'   coming to        in frontline     most              behind,
                     digital TV        e-voting         crisis 2002    frontline,                        developed.        going onllne
                                                                        Minitel                          mobile




                                                                                                                                          149
l   I




cent, which againis much less than television's av-          The German media landscape has be en struc-
erage30 per centshareof massmediaadvertising in          tured by decisionsmade by the Allies after the Sec-
the EU (Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 18-20;                 ond World War that even now influence the German
Joukkoviestimet 2006, 122, 334). In Japan tele-          press and broadcasting which are constricted from
vision still dominatesmedia markets both in terms        taking form as 'total' massmedia (see Koivisto &
of viewing time and advertising revenue (Valaskivi       Thomas 2007,6). The FederalRepublic emphasises
2007, 27), but the very specialcharacteristic of the     the regional press,and therefore 'a specificity of the
Japanese   media landscape the incredible boom of
                            is                           German media landscape is the relatively under-
mobile communication    including the mobile internet,   sized role of the supra-regionalparty press' (ibid.,
broadcasting,  books,online music downloadingand         8). Even the public media in Germanyis organised
even the 'virtual wallet'. Japanis the indisputable      by federalstructureinsteadof by centralisedmodelo
leader in mobile content developmentand approxi-          New media in Germanysuffered significantly from
mately two to four years ahead of Europe. (Ibid.,        the crises of 2002, which endedthe hype of the vir-
30-32, 38-39.) The status of each medium in such         tual 'New Economy'. Since that time, media indus-
country-specific characterisations is classified in      tries have paid more attention to the so-called core
Table 3 as 'relatively high' or 'relatively low'. Ja-    business.(Ibid., 8-9.)
pan is actually amongthe top countries in the world          The crises of the 'new media bubble' and 3G
in every media sector,and it is thereforehard to de-     mobile licenses in Germanyalso upsetthe Finnish
rifle any medium that would have relatively low sta-     media landscapeat the beginning of the twenty-first
tus in the Japanese medialandscape.                      century. Before that, Finland has been on the
     The 'statuses'of media are, of course,linked to     frontline of the 'digital revolution', and the key-
historical, social and cultural developmentsin each      word in the media branch was convergence. But
country. For example,Japanese      successin the mo-     more recently, media companies have focused on
hile market is connectedto a post-war policy that        their traditional trade instead of such things as
has emphasisedtechnologicaland economic devel-           mergerswith the ICT business.However, the influ-
opmentand led to an information societyand 'u-Ja-        ence of Nokia on the national economy is so huge
pan' (Ubiquitous Japan)strategies as national en-        that the ICT branchis an engine of the twenty-first
deavours (ibid., 10-11,24). The samekinds of vi-         century Finnish media business. In household
sions or strategies have recenti y come into the         Internet connections Finland has not been among
world in all the target,countries one way or another,    the world's flor even Europe's top countries (e.g.,
but there are significant differences in the commit-     Joukkoviestimet 2006, 346), but Finland was the
mentto the developmentof ICT.                            first country in the world to move completely to
     According to interviews in information technol-     terrestrial digital television,during the year 2007.
ogy, for example,  Australia 'lags behind other devel-       The special characteristics of the U.S. media
oped countries' and 'the digital revolution is just      landscapeare, of course,its leading role as an enter-
 [now] aboutto hit Australia' (Rahkonen2007, 17).3       tainment producerin the world and the vastness     and
The reasonfor this may well be the isolation of the       diversity of its nationalmedia markets.A strongdo-
continent, the relatively small population and the       mestic market makes the U.S. media branch quite
high degree of urbanisation,which in turn have led        independentfrom international influences and also
to a combination of conservativemedia policy and         keeps it on the frontline of technological and con-
concentrated   media market (ibid., 18-21). Likewise,     tent development(Aslama et al. 2007, 14-15). The
late assimilationinto global information networks in     U.S. is still unquestionably 'a television country':
France can be linked to the strong maintenanceof          'Although on-line andmobile mediahavebecomein-
national identity through languagelaw and cultural        creasingly important, ...the statistics illustrate the
protectionism. By contrast, by developing and re-         crucial role of television as a medium in the U.S.'
taining its own network communication system              (ibid., 15-16). After becoming independentin 1991
 'Minitel', averted the spread of the Internet in        Estonia adopted the U.S. model of liberal media
France for many years. Later, the French eagerly         markets in many ways. Television also dominates
adopted the Internet while European ICT enthusi-         the Estonian media landscape,and cable-TV espe-
 asm crystallised at the EU's Lisbon meeting in           cially has a relatively strong position there
 2000, and today France is one ofthe top-countries       (Salovaara-Moring & Kallas 2007,18-22). Rapid
 in EuropeanInternet connections.Nevertheless,    the     socialchangesand the role of the Russian-speaking
cinema still hasa unique statusin Frenchmediacul-         minority have been the key questions of Estonian
roce.(Puustinen2007,10-12,19.)                           medialandscape policies (ibid., 6, 27).
                                                                             and



150
Main Research Institutions                             countries. Especially in countries with very tradi-
and Organisations                                      tional academic institutions like France and Ger-
                                                       many, much of the researchis carried out by other
The country-specific characteristics in the media disciplines than those specifically called media or
landscapesdiscussedabove constitute background cornmunication            research.A great dealof humanistic
for mediaand cornmunication      research eachcoun- and social scientific media and communicationre-
                                         in
try. Because the size of the population varies         searchisdone, for example,in sociology,the politi-
among fue target countries,fue sizesand structures cal sciences,linguistics, psychologyand fue educa-
 of the university systems are also quite different.   tional sciences. The roots of media and communica-
 But there are also congruencies structuring media tion research found in more traditional academic
                                   in                                 are
and cornmunication     research eachcountrystudied disciplines such as history, philosophy, sociology,
                                in
 for 'Mapping Media and Communication Re- science of law, the study of literature, psychology
search'.                                               and political sciences-a fact that still affects meth-
     First, in all countriesmedia and communication odologies, theories and perspectives in media and
 research carried out by universities and other aca- cornmunication
           is                                                           research.
demic institutions suchas polytechnical schoolsas          Table 4 illustrates the size of fue acadernicinsti-
 well as by non-academicresearchinstitutions and tutions of media and communication education in
organisations. Non-academic researchis done by         eachtargetcountry. It has to be kept in mind that it
public and private agenciesor by research     teams in is very difficult to obtain comparabledata even for
media companiesand funded both publicly and pri-       the numbers of universities, BA/MA/PhD pro-
vately. In each country there is a much greater de- grarnmes      and professorsfor a specific discipline. As
greeof private funding of mediaand cornmunication mentioned,the definition of disciplines and number
 researchthan public funding. This is evident in the   of subjects included in the disciplines vary from
 broadly business-orientatedICT sector. Basically,     country to country. The subjects mar also go by
organisationsdoing media and cornmunicationre-         different llames.
 searchin each country are not after all so different.     Another problem is that the bigger the country,
     Second,in all financing of academicmedia and the more difficult it is to obtain reliable data about
 cornmunicationresearch shareof humanitiesand fuesekinds of numbers:
                            the                                                  tracing all mediaand cornmu-
 social sciencesis marginal comparedto that of fue      nicationprograrnmes fue U.S., for example,is ex-
                                                                               in
 natural sciences,cornmunicationtechnological de- tremely time consuming work, and the numbers of
 velopment and business research.As the U.S. re-       programmes and professors change continuously.
 port explains it, 'comparedto other social sciences, Thereforefue datain Table 4, especiallyvis-a-vis fue
 communicationhas traditionally receivedless fund- U.S. and Germany,have beenculled from various
 ing' in general(Aslama et al. 2007,72). Hence,hu- secondarysources,and, in fue case of Germany,are
 manistic and social media and communication re-        from sevento ten years old. Becausefue number of
 searchis not at the core of the academic funding       universities, programmes and professorships of
 systemin any target country.                          media and communication research has steadily
     Third, the discipline of academic media and        grown in Germany(Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 26-
 cornmunicationresearch undefined in many target 30), it is assumedthat fue Germannumbersin Table
                            is

Table4.        SomeDetails oi AcademicMedia and CommunicationEducation and Researchat the National
               LevelI

                   Finland      Estonia       Germany              Franca          U.S.       Japan       Australia
Universitles         13             2         52 (1997)                22          c.400      c.230          37
MA/PhD
programmes           27           11/1        131 (2000)                -109/93*              53/39          118
Professors           42            13         160(2000)                147           ---
National      Nokia/ITC, newcentres formal  and statecontrol, hardto strong private Non-
characteristics private of excellence hierarchical unclear      discern,   sector, hierarchical,
                funding                 system     discipline healthcomm. research industries
                                                                                            vs.
                                                                                           associations   academy
                                                  ,,   ::;, ',i   ,,
* In joumalism and mass communication only.




                                                                                                                      151
~




4 are too small. The total numbersof MA and PhD              pline, but the main reasonis the richness of fue re-
prograrnmes fue U.S. will algobe muchgreater
                in                                    than   search   conductedby fue industries (Valaskivi 2007,
the numbers in Table 4, which includes only pro-             42). In Japanfue Toleof research    associations algO
                                                                                                               is
grarnmes    injoumalism andmass     cornrnunication.  Pre-   exceptionally strong (ibid.). In countries like Japan
sumably, U.S. is a leaderin mediaand cornrnuni-
            fue                                              and fue U.S. where 'media hasbecomea huge busi-
cation education    and research fue world. Thus,Ta-
                                 in                          ness', media-related researchis algo big business
ble 4 tells more in a generallevel aboutthe scale of         (Aslama et al. 2007, 66), and the Tole of academic
acadernic    mediaand cornrnunication   education tar-
                                                    in       mediaand cornrnunication     research remainedmar-
                                                                                                   has
gel countriesthan it doesaboutexactfigures.                  ginal from fue point of view of fue media industries.
     More interesting in Table 4 are the short de-           Social scientistshave algo positioned themselvesto
scriptions of fue nationalcharacteristicsof research         be critical actors in society, thereby increasing the
organisationsand institutions. For example,France            gap betweenacademicsand industries. Among the
and Germany proved to serve quite conservative               target countries the critical tradition has remained
and constricted academic environments for media              quite strong in the U.S., France and Finland, while
and cornrnunication    research because their hierar-
                                          of                 algO Japan,
                                                                   in        Australia and Germanymany scholars
chical and introverted university structures.In Ger-         see their task as constituting a critical counterforce
many the postgraduate qualification process, Ha-             against econornicinterestsof industry.
                                                                      fue
 bilitation, 'does not encourage   scientific originality'       The gap between industries and academic re-
(ibid.,18). In Francethe problemhas beenthe rela-            searchhas not encouraged       industries to finance hu-
ti ve youth of discipline and the low status of              manistic and social scientific researchor education.
 'Infocom' (Sciences 1 'information et de la com-
                        de                                   The problem has been sharply criticised by an Aus-
 munication)in the government      controlled systemof       tralian professor: 'Industry takes the graduales but
acadernicresearch     and disciplines (Puustinen2007,        puts very little back to the journalism academy'
26-31). In both countries the identity of media and           (Rahkonen 2007, 56). In Finland, the situation
communication researchhas been poorly defined,               changed after the Helsingin SanomatFoundation,
and much of the research beensplinteredamong
                             has                             basedin fue Sanoma      WSOY corporation,was estab-
various more traditional and establisheddisciplines          lished in 2005. The Foundation has become the
(Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 15, 43-44; Puustinen                most prominent sponsor of humanist and social
2007, 30-32).                                                media research Finland. Helsingin SanomatFoun-
                                                                               in
     In 'the new world', academic systems seemto              dation algo funded the 'Mapping Media and Com-
be less hierarchicalthan in fue bornecountriesof fue          munication Research' project. (Herkman &
modero Europeanuniversity, and media and com-                 Viiharnaa2007,47-51.)
municationresearch Japan, U.S. andAustralia
                        in        fue                             But the difficulties in obtaining funding for aca-
is in many ways more pragmatically oriented than,            demic humanistic or social scientific media and
for example,in Germanyand France. But this does               communication researchbecome more evident in
not mean that academic researchand media indus-               comparisonwith technological or natural scientific
tries are closely linked in fuesecountries either. On         research in every target country. For example,
the contrary,there seemsto be quite a gap between            whereasthe Academy of Finland and prívate Finn-
mediaindustriesand academicresearch every tar-
                                             in               ish foundationsfinanced humanistic and social sci-
gel country. The only exception might be Estonia             entific mediaand cornrnunication     research  with some
where recentsocialchanges       haveencouraged ac- aU        7 rnillion euros in 2006,Nokia alone financed its re-
tors in fue field to work together.In a small country         searchand developmentby almost 3.9 billion euros
like Estonia,humanistsand social scientistshave to            in the very same year (ibid., 45). In many target
 look for collaborative projects if they are to obtain        countries, owing to the strong economic assump-
extensivefunding for larger research       projects. (See    tions of ICT, stateorganisedresearch       funds are algo
Salovaara-Moring& Kallas 2007,56-57.)                        nowadayschanneledmostly to information techno-
     It is actuallyquite surprising how separate fue
                                                   are        logical development by various national research
acadernic    humanisticand socialscientific media and        programmesand semi-public foundations. For ex-
 cornrnunication   research from mediaindustriesin the        ample,fue total researchfinancial by the Academy
U.S. and Japan,    where cornrnunication mediain-
                                           and                of Finland in 2006 was approximately 257 million
dustries have an essential position in structuring           euros.The share of humanistic and social scientific
whole societies. In Japanthe relative modesty of             media and communication research was between
academic media and communication researchcan                 one and two per cent, with the majority of the
 partly be explained by the obscurity of the disci-          funding allocatedto technologicaland biD sciences.



152
Meanwhile,          fue Finnish           Funding         Agency     for Tech-        cultural       aspects of media and communication,                             and
nology and Innovation                  (TEKES)        funds research and              3) those        that focus         on media        and communication
development             activities        undertaken          by companies            technology.           These three categories            could be found in
and research organisations                   registered       in Finland.       In    all countries          but their ratings and precise definitions
2006, TEKES             invested       465 million         euros in research          vary from           country       to country        (see Table         5). Fur-
and development               projects       in companies,           universi-        thermore,         the categories            are not exclusive              and, in
ties and research institutes,                 but humanistic          or social       many cases, they overlap.                   For example,        cultural        and
scientific       media       research        had only a very limited                  feminist       studies often combine               cultural    and political
role in those projects.                                                               aspects        with     their    analyses,     and technological                 re-
     On a nationallevel,                then, fue funding           of human-          search is sometimes                linked     to social      and political
istic or social scientific             media and communication                 re-    analysis        as it is in the case of information                        society
search is quite marginal                  in every target country            and      research.         Thus, definitions           here simply           mean that
dependent         on prívate         funding.       Country-specific           in-    some dimension                of the research appears to be more
terests may arise in some approaches,                          however,        be-    prominent          than others.          It is also necessary              to note
cause they fit current economic                      and social conjunc-              that 'political'          is understood        more traditionally              here
tures. A good example                  is health communication                 re-    as 'politics'         or 'policy'        than in representation             or au-
search in fue U.S., which does not at all have fue dif-                               dience         analyses         of cultural      or feminist           studies,
ficulties      that are discussed                  above     (Aslama      et al.      where       'political'         often refers to identity            politics      or
2007,73,83-84).                                                                       constructionofmicro-levelpowerrelations.
                                                                                         In Estonia almost all media and communication
Main         Approaches                   in Media           and                      r:search        see~~d        to have. some connection                 with s?-
C                  "       t"         R               h                               clal   and       pol1tlcal       queshons       because        of    the     rapld
    ornrnurnca              Ion           esearc                                                      ...
                                                                                      changes         m soclety         after the collapse          of fue SovIet
Many generalisations                 made in this paper are based                     Union:         'Media        is analysed       as part of society               and
on interviews           rather than on statistics,              but in defin-         not as a separate unity.                 The rapidly       changing            soci-
ing fue main research approaches                          in target countries         ety creates           new problems            to which        the academic
the conclusions            are based mostly               on various     statis-      community              must respond.'          (Salovaara-Moring                     &
tical analyses            found      in research       publications.         The      Kallas         2007,      63.)     Specific      social       and     political
problem       is that primary             data, methods        and fue clas-          themes in Estonia                are fue Russia-speaking              minority
sifications       behind      these statistics            have been so het-           and adaptation               to fue post-communistic                era (ibid.,
erogeneous             that it is hard to make                sophisticated           61). It is thus not an overstatement                      to claim         that all
comparisons            between         countries.      Nevertheless          it is    academic         media and communication                   research in Es-
still possible         to give a rough overview                    of fue main        tonia has a strong connection                   to social and political
approaches         in media and communication                      research.          questions.            It is notable       that some topics             that are
     In most countries             the main approaches               found       in   highly         popular        in the Nordic           countries,       such as
media and communication                     research can be classified                popular        culture,       feminist     media studies and organi-
in one of three general categories:                        1) those that em-           sational       communication,             are dealt with           only in fue
phasise       political     and social questions               in relation      to     student MA theses but otherwise                       remain       in Estonia
media       or communication,                2) those that emphasise                  unpublished            (ibid., 62). A special national               character-


Table5.           MainApproaches in Media and CommunicationResearchin 2006

                           Flnland              Estonla              Germany          France                u.s.                 Japan              Australia
MostpopularlhernesMediaand            Politicall                     Massmedia;       ICT; Mediaand Massmedia;         ICT; Mediaand                Journalism
in academicjournals popular           societal                       Communi-         popular culture; ICT; Advetising popularculture;              and newsmedia;
(or books)          culture;                                         cationin         Politicall       andPR*          Mass media*                  Communication
                    Politicallsocietal;                              general          societal                                                      studies;
                    Journalism                                                                                                                      Culturalstudies
                    studies
National                    Feminist            Semiotics,          Humanities,       Social con-           Diversity,          National-           Cultural studies,
characteristics            critique,            Ethnicily,          Unübersicht-      structivism,          MCR, Media          Asian,              Political
                           Cultural             Post-               lickeit, Online   Newtechnology,ellects                      Western            economy
                           studies              socialism                             National

* The U.S. and lapan data are basedon published books (not articles) and are Iherefore not directly comparable to other countries.




                                                                                                                                                                      153
-



istic in Estonia is the influence of the famous Tartu            Germany and France have quite different rela-
 schoolof semiotics(ibid., 64).                            tions to media and popular culture studies. While
      In Finland media and popular culture proved to       suchapproaches popular in France,the research
                                                                                 are
be the most popular topic in academicthesesespe-           has beenconcluded more under the distinctive na-
 cially at fue MA level (Herkman & Viihamaa 2007,          tional traditions rather than under the label of
 57), but a later analysis of academic articles pub-       Anglo-American cultural studies.This has meant a
lished in English reveals that Finnish scholarsem-         more elitist-based and more protectionist attitude
phasisealgo social and political themes,especially         vis-a-vis commercial popular culture, and the ap-
 in their postgraduatework. There were algo clear           proachhas tberefore been highly critical in nature.
differences among Finnish university departments            However, since the 1990s,Frenchmedia and com-
 and disciplines: the humanities emphasisedmedia            munication research opened up to international
                                                                                      has
 and popular culture, while social science empha-           influences, and a new generation of scholars has
 sised social and poli tic al as well as journalism re-     emerged with a different relationship to popular
 search(ibid., 57-59). However, it becameclear that         culture studies. (Sumiala-Seppanen         2007, 99-101.)
 in Finland, it is possible to speak of 'linguistic' or     Today the point of view of social constructivism
  'cultural' turns in media and communication re-           dominates French media and communication re-
 searchbecause cultural and feminist studies have           search,and the fascination with new media tech-
 algohad sucha greatinfluence on more socially ori-         nologieshas broken throughto fue extent that it can
 entedmasscommunication         research.                   be classified as the most popular theme in France
      Popular culture was algoa popular research   sub-      (Puustinen2007, 63-69).
 ject in Japanand Australia. Japanhas a strong re-                Research  into newmedia technology-especially
  searchtradition into Japanesepopular culture and          online communication-is steadilybecoming more
 media history (Valaskivi 2007, 72-75), while Aus-           common in Germanyas well, even though,the con-
 tralia is world famous in Anglo-American cultural          servative and hierarchical academicsystemempha-
 studies (Rahkonen2007,58-62). However, in Japan             sises more traditional approachessuch as research
  today popular culture studies are often connected         into mass communication and media effects
 to 'new media' phenomenasuch as anime, digital              (Koivisto & Thomas 2007,42-43). Germannational
  gamesand World Wide Web (Valaskivi 2007, 66).              characteristics include the strikingly high share of
  Therefore,Japanese     academicmedia and communi-          humanities-for example,linguistics -among media
  cation researchin many casesis highly focused on           and communicationscholars' orientation (ibid., 32-
   new information and communicationtechnologyas              33) as well as 'the lack of clarity' (Unübersicht-
  is the researchby private organisations.It is worth         lickeit) in the field (ibid., 15). Koivisto and Thomas
  recalling that the Japanesedata here are based             argüe that the conservatism of universities has led
   solely on books published on media and communi-           to difficulties inserting cultural studies into a Ger-
   cation issuesand the ranking of approachesmight           man context, and authors see that multidisciplinary
  be quite different had the ranking beenmadeby aca-         cultural studiescould serve asa way out of the cul-
  demic articles. Overall, Japanese     academic media       de-sacof the 'deadlocked political constellation of
  and communicationresearch modestcomparedto
                                  is                         fue Germanuniversity' (ibid., 66-71).
  the private sector, with strong roots in traditional            Lack of clear definition could algo describe the
   western mass communication research (ibid., 67-           U.S. media and communication approachesin that
   69). In Japan technological approaches are very           fue research    field is so huge and diverse that it is al-
   strong,and recently there have beenefforts to pro-         most impossibleto make any generalisations.How-
   mote collaboration betweenacademic and private             ever, there are some approachesthat are obviously
   research as well as effects to develop genuinely           stronger than others in the U.S. Traditional mass
   interdisciplinary projects betweentechnologicaland         communicationresearch(MCR) is still perhapsthe
    socialapproaches   (ibid., 82-83).                        most popular approach found in U.S. media and
       The national characteristic of Australian media        communication research, even though interest in
   and communication research is pragmatism                    new communication technology -especialIythe
    (Rahkonen 2007, 57). Another key aspect in Aus-           Internet -increases continuously. National charac-
   tralia is the popularity of the political economyre-       teristics of the U.S. are the continuous popularity
    sulting from 'fue exceptionallyconcentrated   owner-       of media effects researchand the strong emphasis
    ship structure'of Australian media. 'The Australian        on researchinto advertising and public relations.
    version of politic al economy is algo known as the        (Aslama et al. 2007, 83, 110-111.)It is evident that
    "media matesapproach".' (Ibid., 60.)                      the remarkablerole of commercialmedia industries



  154
in the U.S. has led to these kinds of national em-             manistic approaches are more 'cultural' in that they
phases in media and communication research.                    rely on qualitative methods and put more emphasis
    A common feature in every target country is an             on theories and concepts of symbolic reality than
emphasis on empirical research, The status of em-              do social approaches, which are more 'materialist'
pirical research is naturally highest among prívate            and have stronger traditions in the use of quantita-
research organisations, but academic media and                 tive methods and the reliance on empirical data
communication research is algo mainly based on em-             about social realities. These differences, however,
pirical analyses, even though the academy discusses            are ill-defined and by no means all-inclusive. Quite
theoretical questions more than does prívate, indus-           the contrary. It seems that discourse analysis and
try-based applied research. Yet solely theoretical in-         textual analysis as well as criticism of post-mod-
vestigations seem to be quite marginal in today's              ernism and post-structuralism have today become
academy. According to interviews, the most empiri-             part of almost all humanistic and social media and
cal emphasis among the target countries is found in            communication research in fue target countries.
the U.S. and Australia, while theory has the strong-
est support in France and Japan, and perhaps in
Germany.                                                       Future          ChaUenges            to    Research
    In most countries quantitative methods still have          Even though there were many differences among the
the strongest position in empirical analysis, but              target countries, those scholars interviewed seemed
qualitative methods have increased their popularity            to be strikingly unanimous about the future chal-
since fue 1980s and fue so-called 'cultural' or 'lin-          lenges to academic media and communication re-
guistic turn' (see e.g., Bonnell & Hunt 1999). Pri-            search. The challenges can be grouped in five inter-
vate research organisations still rely on quantitative         related categories that were crystallised in fue U.S.
methods, especially on surveys, Jet algo in the                report (Aslama et al. 2007, 121). The same catego-
academy quantitative methods such as laboratory                ríes can be found in one form or another in every re-
experiments, surveys and content analyses evi-                 port:
dently domínate in the U.S., Estonia, Germany and
                          ,             , ..e
                                                                1 Th h        .     d         ..
                                                                       c angmg me la envuonment
Japan. In France and Fmland qualItat1ve methods
seem to have an exceptionally strong position in               2. National vs. international orientation
academic media and communication research, but                 3 Th       1     ,
 h ' ."             b d         '     .         h   h           .e     qua Ity o f t he researc h
t lS 1mpress10n lS ase on mterv1ews rat er t an
being the result of statistical analyses.                      4. Affirming         the institutional        status of the disci-
    The differences among methodologies and the                   pline
confrontation between theory and empiricism vary                          ."
b th d.. 1     .      d           h  th t d   .   t th         5.   Improvmg        relatIonsh1ps        between   academia   and
 y    e   lSC1p   mes   an   approac   es   a   omma   e   e        .
     .m                                                               d ustry
nat10nal contexts. Aslama et al. (2007, 138-139) ar-
gue that tension between humanistic and social sci-            The first challenge is fue rapidly changing media en-
entific approaches is especially characteristic of the         vironment that has been discussed in more detail in
U.S. media and communication research, but it is               the section 'The media landscapes'. In the Japan re-
evident that the same kind of distinctions can be              port Katja Valaskivi (2007, 79-80) summarises the
found in most of the target countries. There are               changes with the term 'convergence', which com-
clear differences between humanistic media (film and           bines technological, economical and cultural dimen-
television studies, literature studies, linguistics, art       sions of 'converging media systems' (cf. Murdock
history, etc.) and social scientific media (mass com-          2000; Iosifidis 2002). In particular changes in com-
munication research, media sociology, journalism               munication technology and markets have been so
 studies) and communication          approaches, even          rapid that many scholars distrusted the ability of
though fue 'linguistic' or 'cultural turn' and the in-         academic research to react fast enough: the academy
fluences of cultural and feminist studies have per-            seems to lag behind in technological, social and eco-
haps made disciplines more similar than ever before            nomic changes. On the other hand it is possible to
(see e.g., Ferguson & Golding 1997; Murdock                    ask to what extent academic research should react to
1997).                                                         rapid changes in fue media environment and to what
    The separation of social scientific 'research' and         extent its task is to 'slow clown' or 'denaturalise'
humanistic 'studies' algo draws lines between                  the continuous talk about change and the techno-
theory and empiricism as well as between quantita-             logical hype? Considerable continuity can algo be
tive and qualitative methods. It was clear that hu-            found in media environments, while the social his-



                                                                                                                              155
-




    tory of the mediahas demonstrated changes
                                          that          are      in their world history The Human Web(2003). Aca-
    not always so 'radical' or 'revolutionary' as they are       demic humanistic and social scientific media re-
    claimed to be in contemporarydiscourses(see e.g.,            searchhas become a 'second-class citizen', with
    Winston 1998; Mattelart 2001; Briggs & Burke                 short-term financing and employments that do not
    2002).                                                       support substantialresearchprojects, which in tum
         The secondchallenge is linked to the first that         are essentialfor renewing the discipline. Todaythe
    deregulation and liberalisation of the media have            majority of academicmedia researchis carried out
    opened national media markets -at least to some              by prívate funding that emphasises      industry-based
    extent-to intemational or global competition. Con-           applied studies instead of so-called basic research.
    centrationof media ownershipandmergersof media                Therefore, the key question in all target countries
    companieshave beenone result of this processand              proved to be how to affirm the conditions for self-
    have made national media marketsmore dependent               containedacademic      research.
    on global media corporations (see Croteau &                         The fourth challenge,affirrning the institutional
    Hoynes 2001; Doyle 2002). At the sametime aca-                status of the discipline, is also linked to the previ-
    demic media and communicationresearch been      has           ous challenges.It is obvious that the relatively low
    quite nation-bound because of its commitmentto                institutional statusgoeshand in hand with a low de-
    nationallanguages cultural boundaries well as
                          and                      as             gree of academic financing. Many scholars inter-
    to national media and education policies. Many                viewed believed that strengtheningfue institutional
    scholars interviewed saw a contradiction between              statusof fue media and communicationdiscipline in
    the emphasisin media researchon nationalperspec-              the academy     would therefore meanmore money for
    tive and media industries'emphasison intemational             research.But there are also other dimensionsto fue
     issues.                                                       'lack of disciplinary clarity'. As the country-spe-
          According to the France report, cultural protec-        cific reports of fue 'Mapping Media and Communi-
     tionism and accentuating   Frenchlanguagein univer-           cation Research'project demonstrate,     fueTe pro-
                                                                                                                  are
      sity policy is a problem in fue intemationalisation         found disagreements defining media and commu-
                                                                                          in
     of French media and communication research                    nication researchas an academic discipline. Disa-
      (Puustinen 2007, 74-77). The situation is com-              greementsare in many casesso fundamentalthat it
      pletely different in Finland, for example, where             really seemsto be a 'mission impossible' to define
     publishing in English is fue most important means             any clear-cut discipline of media and communica-
      of achieving merit in fue academy.Interviewees,es-           tion research.From this point of view, requirements
      pecially in small or isolated countries like Finland,        for the congruency of the field can also be seenas
     Estonia and Australia, seemedto long for intema-              belonging to paradigm battles and a threat against
     tional research   collaboration. Again it is possibleto       plurality or diversity of research; therefore, many
      ask if ranking by publications in intemational ref-          scholars, especially those from humanistic or cul-
      ereedjoumals -a habit adopted from natural sci-              tural approaches,were quite happy with the cur-
      ences-is truly the best way to evaluatehumanistic            rentmixed situationin mediaand communication        re-
      or social media and communication research. To                searchin fue academy.
      what extent should media and communication re-                     The fifth challenge is to overcome the gap
      searchbe national in, for example,and take part in            betweenacademicmedia research       and media indus-
      public debateson media's Tole in society or fue na-          tries. Many scholarsboth in fue academy     and in pri-
      tion state?                                                  vate organisations  voiced fue desirefor increased  co-
          The third challenge,guaranteeing    high quality of       operation between industry and the academy.Aca-
       research,is intimately linked to complaints about            demicswere expected take media industries'prac-
                                                                                            to
      the poor financing and resourcesof contemporary               tical orientationmore seriously, vice versa,while
                                                                                                     and
      academic media and communication research.As                  industries were expectedto leam more substantial
       shown in the section 'Main research institutions             thinking from the academy instead of purely
       and organisations',humanistic and social scientific          economy-oriented    investigations.Someinterviewed
       mediaand communicationresearch not at the core
                                           is                       truly believed thatacademicresearch help indus-
                                                                                                           can
       of1he academyin any of the target countries. This            tries to contextualisecurrentchanges fue media en-
                                                                                                          in
       is not surprise.Since the SecondWorld War, devel-             vironmentandincreaseknowhow,for example,about
        opmentin all research haveemphasised      large-scale,      qualitative research  methods.Academic researchers
       institutionalised and bureaucratically applied                thought that they in tum could benefit from indus-
       projects whose goal is economic progress or mili-             tries' hugeresources updatedmicro-level exper-
                                                                                           and
       tary success, McNeill and McNeill demonstrate
                      as                                            tise in media and communicationtechnologies,pro-



     156
duction and marketing. The problem in developing              of 'creative industries' among academic institutions
  collaboration between the academy and industry is              (e.g., Rahkonen 2007, 66-67). The key question here
  the critical task of the academy, which was still seen        is to what extent co-operation between fue academy
  as central by many scholars. The sub-projects                 and industry is possible without losing the critical
  showed that it is now trendy to speak, for example,           potential of academic research.




  Notes                                                         References
     1. The main work behind this paper has therefore           As1ama, Minna et al. (2007) Mapping Media and
         been done by the researchersand research teams                Communication Research in the U.S. Research
         of fue country-specific sub-projects. For work we11           Reports 2/2007. He1sinki: University of He1sinki,
        done I wou1d 1ike to thank Minna As1ama,Ka11e                  Communication Research Centre, Department of
         Siira, Rona1dRice and Pekka Aula from the U.S.               Communication.
        project; Juho Rahkonenfrom the Australia project;       Baldwin, Thomas et al. (1996) Convergence.Integrating
         Inka Salovaara-Moring and Triin Kallas from the               Media, Information & Communication. London:
         Estonia project; Katja Valaskivi from the Japan              Sage.
        project; Liina Puustinen and Johanna Sumia1a-           Bonnell, Victoria E. & Hunt, Lynn (eds.) (1999) Beyond
         Seppanenfrom the France project; Juha Koivisto                the Cultural Turn. Berkeley: University of Cali-
         and Peter Thomas from fue Germany project; and               fornia Press.
         Miika Viihiimaa from fue Fin1and   project. I worked   Briggs, Asa & Burke, Peter (2002) A Social History of
        as the project leader of fue 'Mapping Media and                the Media. From Gutenberg to the Internet. Ox-
         Communication Research' as well as a leader of               ford: Blackwell Publishers.
         the Finland sub-project. In the U.S. project, Pro-     Croteau, David & Hoynes, William (2001) The Busi-
         fessor Philip Napoli served as an advisor and Katy            ness of Media. Corporate Media and the Public
        Pearceas a researchassistant;in fue Franceproject              Interest. London: Pille Forge Press.
         Aura Lindeberg and Elina Perttula worked as            CurTan,James (2002) Renewing the Radical Tradition,
        research assistants; in the Japan project Hiromi               in CurTan, James: Media and Power, 127-165.
        Tsuji worked as a researchassistantwith Professor             London: Routledge.
         Noboru Soneharaservingas an advisor. In fue Aust-      Doyle, Gillian (2002) Understanding Media Economics.
        ralia project the University of Queensland (Pro-              London: Sage.
         fessor Jan Servaes and assistant Levi Obifiojor)       Ferguson, Marjorie & Golding, Peter (eds.) (1997)
         and in the Japan project the National Institute of            Cultural Studies in Question. London: Sage.
        Informatics in Tokyo (Professor Sonehara) were          Hassan, Robert (2000) The Space Economy of
        the collaborative units. In the U.S. project the               Convergence, Convergence: The Journal of
        University of California and fue Donald McGannon              Research into New Media Technologies 6(2000):
        Communication ResearchCenter at Fordham Uni-                  4 (Winter), 18-35.
        versity were fue main units of collaboration. I would   Hemondhalgh, David (2002) The Cultural Industries.
         alBo 1ike to thank all those media researchexperts           London: Sage.
        who were interviewed in each country. Without           Herkman, Juha & Viihiimaa, Miika (2007) Viestintiitutki-
        them fue whole project would have been a mission              muksen nykytila Suomessa. Viestinnan laitoksen
        impossible. For more information about the                    tutkimusraportteja 1/2007. Helsinki: Helsingin
        project, see the Appendix.                                    yliopisto, Viestinnan tutkimuskeskusCRC, Viestin-
    2. The research reports of each country have been                 nan laitos.
        published on CRC's web Bite: http://www.valt.           losifidis, Petros (2002) Digital Convergence:Challenges
        helsinki.fi/blogs/crc/en/mapping.htm                          for European Regulation, in The Public Javnost
        Reports can alBo be downloaded from the Helsin-               9(2002): 3, 27-48.
        gin Sanomat Foundation's web Bite: http://              Jakubowicz,Karol (2004) A SquarePeg in a RoundHole:
I       www.hssaatio.fi/en/completed_projects.html                    The EU's Policy on Public Service Broadcasting.
 ,3.    Scholars interviewed in 'Mapping Media and                    In Bondebjerg, lb & Golding, Peter (eds.) 2004:
        Communication Research' project disagree, for                 European Culture and the Media, 277-301. Bris-
        example, the United Nation's E-government                     tol: Intellect Books.
          Survey2008, which values Australia really high in     Joukkoviestimet2006 -Finnish Mass Media. Helsinki:
        global e-governance. See http://unpanl.un.org/                Statistics Finland.
        intradoc/groups/public/documents/UN/UNPANO              Kaitatzi-Whitlock, Sophia (1996) Pluralism and Media
        28607.pdf.                                                    Concentration in Europe. Media Policy and In-




                                                                                                                  157
~




     dustrial Policy, European Journal of Communi-         Picard, Robert (1989) Media Economics: Concepts and
     cation 11(1996): 4,453-483.                                Issues. Newbury Park/California: Sage.
Koivisto, Juha & Thomas, Peter (2007) Mapping Com-         Puustinen, Liina (2007) Mapping Media and Commu-
     munication and Media ~esearch: Germany. Re-                nication Research: France. Research Reports 51
     search Reports 6/2007. Helsinki: University of             2007. Helsinki: University of He1sinki, Commu-
     Helsinki, Communication Research Centre, De-               nication Research Centre, Department of Com-
     partment of Communication.                                 munication.
Küng, Lucy et al. (1999) Impact of fue Digital Revolu-     Rahkonen, Juho (2007) Mapping Media and Commu-
     tion on fue Media and CornmunicationsIndustries,           nication Research: Australia. ResearchReports71
     The Public Javnost 6(1999):3, 29-48.                       2007. Helsinki: University of He1sinki, Commu-
Lowe, Gregory Ferrell & Hujanen, Taisto (eds.) (2003)            nication Research Centre, Department of Com-
     Broadcasting & Convergence: New Articulations              munication.
       of the Public Service Remit. Goteborg: Nordicom.    Salovaara-Moring, Inka & Kal1as, Triin (2007) Map-
Marsden Christopher T. & Verhulst, Stefaan G. (eds.)            ping Communication and Media Research: Esto-
     (1999) Convergencein European Digital TV Regu-              nia. Research Reports 3/2007. Helsinki: Univer-
      lation. London: B1ackstonePress Ltd.                       sity of He1sinki, Communication Research Cen-
Mattelart, Armand (2001) Histoire de la société de               tre, Department of Communication.
      l'information. Paris: Decouverte.                    Sumiala-Seppanen,Johanna (2007) Cultural Studies in
McNeil1, J.R. & McNeill, Wil1iam H. (2003) The Hu-               France -Receptions and Rejections, in Puustinen,
      man Web. The Bird's-Eye View of World History.             Liina 2007, 97-101.
      New York: W.W. Norton.                               Valaskivi, Katja (2007) Mapping Media and Commu-
Murdock, Graham (1997) Base Notes: The Conditions                nication Research: Japan. Research Reports 41
      of Cultural Practice, in Ferguson, Marjorie &              2007. He1sinki: University of He1sinki, Commu-
      Go1ding, Peter (eds.), 86-101.                             nication ResearchCentre, Department of Cornmu-
Murdock, Graham (2000) Digita1 Futures: European                 nication.
      Te1evisionin the Age of Convergence,in Wieten,        Winston, Brian (1998) Media Technologyand Society.
      Jan et al. (eds.) (2000) Television Across Europe.          A History: From the Telegraph to the Internet.
      A Comparative Introduction, 35-58. London: Sage.            New York: Routledge.




 JURA RERKMAN, D.Soc.SC., Academy of Finland Postdoctoral Researche1; Depart-
 ment of Communication, PL 54, FI-OOOI4 University of Helsinki, juha.herkman
 @helsinki.fi


 158
r




    Appendix

    Facts about the 'Mapping Media and CommunicationResearch'
    The project'sbudget was a total of 275,000euros (for sevencountries).Tbere were nine researchers allin
    plus five researchassistants tour team leaders.Togethertheir work was a little less than five researcher-
                               and
    years (60 months).The U.S. sub-project's team,consisting of two team leaders,two researchers, research
                                                                                                   a
    assistantand an advisor, was the largest,while the Australian project (one researcherfor six months), the
    Finnish (a project leaderand one researcherfor five months)and the Estonian(two researchers,     together
    working five months)were the smallestsub-projects.

    Table.       Employees 'Mapping Media and Communication
                          in                              Research'

                      Leaders           Months          Researchers       Months         Assistants         Months
    Finland              1                2                  1               5                --
    Estonia              -2                                                  5                --
    Germany              -1                                                  9                1               2
    France               1                1                  1               5                2               2
    U.S.                 2                2                  2              11                1               2
    Japan                -1                                                  6                1               2
    Australia            -1                                                  6                --


    CornmunicationResearch    Centre CRC at the University of Helsinki is carrying out the samekinds of stud-
    ies on mediaand communicationresearch Belgium, the Netherlandsand Russiabetweenauturnn2007 and
                                             in
    spring 2008. More sophisticatedsummariesand meta-analyses     ofall country-specific sub-projects will be
    completed by the end of 2008.1 Tbe budgetsof theseprojects are total some 150,000 euros,for which tour
    researchers three research
                 and              assistantsareworking. This paper therefore,gives only a brief surnmary of
    the results of the 'Mapping Media and Cornmunication  Research'project from auturnn2007. Since auturnn
    2007 the director of the CRC and head of the projectshas beenProfessorHannuNierninen.


    Note
     1.    The analysis will be done by Juha Koivisto   and Peter Thomas, researchers from the German sub-project.




                                                                                                                     159

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Q Herkman 2008_

  • 1. r Review Article Corrent Trends in Media Research JUHA HERKMAN In today's eraof extensivespecialisation researchers cornrnunication technologyas well as fue econornics tend to know little about other approaches than that of communicationinsofar as fuesesubjectswere re- of their own expertise. Conceptions of research lated to media research. The project not only fields are often based more on personal and com- mapped academic media and communication re- mon assumptionsthanknowledgeproducedby em- search but algo, insofar as possible, research by pirical analyses.This article tries to clarify fue em- governmental institutions, prívate agencies and pirical reality of media research summarisingfue by media companies.The findings were based on data results of the project 'Mapping Media and Com- concemingyears2005-2006,by and large, although munication Research',which exarninedthecontents a few of the sub-projectshave sample data from a and trends of current media and communicationre- longerperiod and algo a more historical perspective search in seven countries: Finland, the United on the changesand continuities in media and com- States,Germany, France, Japan,Estonia and Aus- munication researchin a target country (e.g., Ger- tralia. The project was funded by the Helsingin many,France and Japan).The gathering and analy- SanomatFoundation and carried out by the Com- gis of the data were carried out during autumn2006 munication ResearchCentre (CRC, University of and spring 2007. Helsinki) during a nine-month period betweenau- The project team agreed on the researchques- tumn 2006 and spring 2007.1The purpose of the tions, the researchprincipIes and the structure of project was to produce an overview of media-re- reports in advance in order to enhancemeaningful lated research,in connection~with launch of the the comparison among the countries. Thus, the basic Foundation, but at the same time it offered a rafequestionsand methods behind each country report opportunity to outline the similarities and differ-arethe same.The most important part of each sub- ences among academic approaches in the above- project was the interview study of key persons in mentionedcountries. media and cornrnunicationresearch.In all, 186 ex- The project's main researchquestionswere the perts were interviewed (seeTable 1). Only the Ger- following: man sub-project wa~based mainly on analysis of written sources(Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 5). 1. What kinds of media and communication re- The interviews produced data, not only facts searchare carried out in each specific country about media and communication research in each and who is doing fue research? country, but algo evaluations and visions of the 2. How do different approaches relate to each state and future of suchresearch.The project team other? members together decided on the organisation, themesand questions for the interviews. In all, the 3. What is the relationship between researchand data of the project consists of secondarydata from the media industries? previous studiesand existing statistics and primary 4. In which direction is researchheadedin the fu- data from interviews with key personsin media and luce? communicationresearchas well as some statistical analysesmade by fue country teamsthemselves. The focus of fue project was on media research, but At first glance the task of mapping the current the researchers algo took into account studies in state of media and communicationresearchin large speechcornrnunication,organisationalcornrnunica- countries suchas the U.S., Japan,France and Ger- tion, public relations, researchand developmentof many looked like 'a rnissionimpossible'. It is clear 145
  • 2. Tablel. Expertslnterviewedfor 'Mapping Media and Communication Research' Finland Estonla Germany Franca U.S. Japan Australia N= AII 32 22 12 19 40 37 24 186 Academy 16 9 11 16 35 14 18 119 Olher 16 13 1 3 5 23 6 67 Men 20 13 7 12 31 30 19 132 ~ Women 12 ~ 5 7 9 7 5 54 :, j Ihat this kind of short-termproject cannotreveal all- of countries indicates the interests of the Founda- inclusive or completeknowledgeof an issueascom- tion, which is no doubt interested in 'new innova- plex as media and communication researchin any tive media markets' in South Korea and Japan,the country. Eventhe definitions of the key conceptsof 'world's leading media market' -Ihe U.S. -various 'media research'and 'communicationresearch'vary examples of the 'Old World' (France, Germany, in different contexts which, in tum, has a multitude Great Britain), and the relationship of these coun- of effects on research institutions and disciplines in tries to the 'domestic context' (Finland) and its the countries studied. Thus, each country createsa close neighbour(Estonia). unique context for media and communication re- VariationsamongIhe countriesalgoproved to be search.Furthermore,the nationalmedia statistics as interesting from the academicpoint of view. Differ- well asthe statisticalanalyses usedas a background encesin size,languages, societies,culturesand poli- in country-specific sub-projectsare often based on cies in eachcountry made for an unusual combina- data and methods that are not directly comparable tion and forced the researchers Ihink about their to to eacholher. positions as researchers a newway. Academic re- in As a result, this article will not provide statisti- searchnowadaysis remarkably specialisedand re- caUycomparableknowledge aboutmedia and com- searchers tend to know little about approaches munication researchin the target countries. More- other than their own, even in their borne country - over, it may not be possible to make broad conclu- not to speak of approaches in other countries or sions from Ihe qualitative comparisonsbetweenthe continents. 'Mapping Media and Communication countries. The goal of the article is simply to pro- Research' can therefore help media scholarsto 10- vide a general overview of the current media and cate themselvesin the broadercontext of the whole communicationresearch Ihe countriesstudiedand in field of research. to compare the countries descriptively rather than This article adopts the structure used in coun- I analyticaUy.The comparisonhere is based mainly try-specific reports. Therefore, the four main sec- ¡ on the country-specific sub-reports of 'Mapping tions are: 1) The media landscapes, 2) Main re- j Media and Communication Research', but in searchinstitutions and organisations, 3) Main ap- contextualising the project, the article algo draws proachesin media and communicationresearch, and upon olher references.2 4) Future challenges to research. In the country- It rnight be asked why Iheseparticular countries specific reports eachsectionwas consideredmainly were included in the project. The targetcountriesdo from a nationalperspective.In Ibis paperthe goalis not constitute any homogenous group, quite the to clarify Ihe sirnilarities in researchtraditions in ad- contrary. They are located far from one another, dition to identifying national characteristics. The Ihey represent various languages culturesand in and first section then outlines the contexts -the struc- somecasestheir connectionsto media and commu- tures of the media market, media and communica- nication researchdo not appear self evident. The tion legislation, and media consumption-and indi- choise ?f target countries ,,:,as. originaUy made by c.ateswhere the resear~hin ea~h country i~ posi- ~ the proJect's sponsor,Helsrngrn SanomatFounda- tloned. The second sectlonconsldersIhe marn aca- , tion. The Foundation has algo funded the same demic and non-academicresearchorganisationsin kinds of projects for SoulhKorea and GreatBritain. each country, and the third section focuses on the Those projects are being carried out at the Univer- contentsand trends in mediaand communicationre- sity of Jyvaskyla, and they are not included in this search.These sections are based on data gathered summarybecausetheir results were not yet avail- by interviews as well as data from quantitative able at the time of writing this article. The selection analysesmade either by the researchteams or by 146
  • 3. earlier researchers. The fourth section summarises tion and distribution but also mediapolicies and leg- the views of the experts interviewed on the future islation in the targetcountries (e.g., Valaskivi 2007, challengesand developmentsof media and cornmu- 23-24; Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 11-12). Conver- nicationresearch. genceand its consequences media markets,con- for tent and communication policies have been much .discussed in many countries since the early 1990s The MedIa Landscapes (see Baldwin et al. 1996; Küng et al. 1999; Marsden One task of the project was to map the structures & Verhulst 1999; Hassan 2000; Murdock 2000; ofmedia landscapes fue targetcountries.This ob- in Iosifidis 2002; Lowe & Hujanen2003). jective was emphasised especiallyiffthe caseof Ja- pan becausethe Japanese context is the most unfa- 2) Concentration of media ownership was an issue miliar from a Europeanpoint of view. Becausethe that carne up in one way or another in every target target countries are remarkably divergent, it was country. Most evident was the historical concentra- not easyto find dimensions in the various media tion of the press (e.g., Puustinen 2007, 18; landscapesthat are clearly comparable. Neverthe- Rahkonen2007, 25-31), but it was clear that cross- less,the connectionsof the media and communica- media ownership and conglomerateshave also be- tion industriesto the so-called globalisationprocess come more and more common in every target coun- reveals at leastthree interrelated but possibly con- try during the past few decades(e.g.,Aslama et al. tradictory tendenciesthat link the target countries' 2007,22-23; Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 15-16; media landscapes, namely: 1)changesin media and Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 8). Another tendencyhas communication technologies, 2) concentration of beenfue globalisation, or at leastthe internationali- media ownership, and 3) the ideal of a diverse or sation, of media corporations. This tendency has pluralistic public sphere. not only occurred in the homelandsof the world's biggest media corporations (e.g., the U.S., Japan, 1)In eachtarget country it has beenclear for several Germanyand France),but also in smallercountries years that fue diffusion of fue Internet, online com- and media markets suchas Finland and Estonia. For munication and mobile technology challengesthe example,the Finnish company SanomaWSOYwas 'old media' in various ways. First, 'old media' have the largest media company in the Nordic countries beendigitalised and fused with the Internetand mo- until year 2007 and is also a leading magazinepub- hile networks, asfue digitalisation of television, fue lisher in the Benelux countries as well as in some increasing number of web-papers and magazines, East Europeancountries. Similarly, the Norwegian and the pilots of mobile- TV demonstrate (e.g., firm Schibstedand fue Swedishhouses of Bonnier Aslama et al. 2007, 27-28, 40-42; Herkman & and Kinnevik own substantial shares of Estonian Viihiimaa 2007, 15-31; Valaskivi 2007,38-39). Sec- newspaper and television markets (Salovaara- ond, technological changeshavealsore-arranged glo- Moring & Kallas 2007, 16, 19).Along with concen- bal and national media markets so that the 'old tration fueTe simultaneously-and paradoxically has media' increasinglyhave to compete with new net- -been a tendency towards micro-level and user-gen- work communicationand ICT industries. erated content production by social networks (e.g., The most immediate pressurehas beendirected Aslama et al. 2007, 16-17). According to David towards print media, which in every target country Hesmondhalgh (2002), this trend has be en more has lost its strengthas a media form and advertising generalamongglobalising cultural industriesduring channel.Even thoughchanges have not Jet beenfa- the late 1990sand early 2000s. tal or devastating,in every target country the press In each country the media market could best be is now searching for ways to maintain its audience describedas an 'oligopoly', in which the market is and advertising share especially in the competition mostly sharedby a few large companies(seePicard for younger media consumers.A good example of 1989,31-33). In most target countries there was this is fue New York Times Company,which on the also one media corporation that was remarkably one hand is one of the most traditional and recog- larger than the others and therefore undeniably led nised U.S newspaper houses, while on the other the competition. These corporations included, for hand it has successfully invested a great deal in example,Time Warner in the U.S., Bertelsmannin online services.(Aslama et al. 2007, 36-38) Germany,Vivendi in France,News Corporation in The third change is the technological conver- Australia and SanomaWSOY Finland. Thesewere in genceofbroadcastingand telecornmunication, which the companies that were also more international will affect not only mediamarketsor media produc- than their local competitors. Time Warner, News 147
  • 4. Table2. SomeDetails on Media Markets ofTarget Countriesin 2004-2005 Flnland Estonla Germany France U.S. Japan Australia Largest media co. Sanoma- Eesti meedial Bertelsmann Vivendi Time Warner Sony Co. News Co. WSOY Schibsted Revenue, in US$ million c.2,700 -22,196 22,194 43,652 63,895* 23,859 TV viewing Leaderin (min/day) 169 270 226 207 491 190 187 ~ i advertising share("lo) Papers (55) Papera (44) Papera (45) TV(33) TV (42) TV (47)TV (35), ..1 * Total revenue: Sony's media revenue in 2004-2005 was 'only' 6,375 million US$. The advertising Agencies Dentsu and Hakuhodo have higher net revenues and are larger Iban the largest 'pure' media company, the newspaper firm Yomiuri Shimbun. Corporation, Bertelsmannand Vivendi belongedto However, since 9/11 and the Iraq war there has the ten largest media companies in the world been widespread discussion about the 'dumbing (Joukkoviestimet2006,333), while SanomaWSOY, down' and narrowing ofU.S. news content(Aslama in terms of its net revenue, was the largest media et al. 2007,32-34), which suggeststhat the 'liberal' company in the Nordic countries until year 2007, tradition might have seriousproblems with increas- when SwedishBonnier overhauledit. It is clear that ing news competition and its relationship to social media industries would be evenmore concentrated and national interests(cf. CurTan2002). In contrast without state regulation and legislation that pre- to the U.S., Francehas relied on state regulation to vents monopolisation and trusts. Among the target guarantee the diversity of the public sphere. In countries Estonia had a surprisingly diverse media Francethe public sphereand freedomof expression ownership that must have somethingto do with the have beenlinked to national intereststo whose cul- relative youth and small size of the Estonianmedia tural integrity the dominance of the U.S. entertain- market. By contrast the Japanese media market is ment industries, for example, is seenas a threat. structuredquite differently and in a way that makes This kind of 'protectionism' may in turn cause it difficult to compareto the other ta:tgetcountries: other problems (including for media and communi- large advertisingagencies Japan, example, in for also cation research) than would a more 'liberal' ap- have an important Tole in content production, and proach. (Puustinen2007,11-12.) theseagenciesare even bigger players in the media Since the 1990sthe dominant question in estab- markets than 'traditional' media companies (see lishing a diverse and pluralistic public spherein Eu- Valaskivi 2007, 14,30). Topehas beenthe statusof public service broadcast- ing (PSB). The liberalisationand deregulationofthe 3) Even though there has beena drastic changeto- media has beena growing trend in many European wards a market-driven or commercial media land- countries, not leastbecauseof an EU media policy scape in the target countries, there is still a strong that has stressedeconornicvalues over a civic soci- argumentfor the idea of a pluralistic or diverse pub- ety, for example,and the expandingmarkets in tel- lic sphereas the core of a democraticsociety. How- ecommunication instead of in othermedia (Kaitatzi- ever, strategies to achieve this ideal vary from Whitlock 1996; Jakubowicz2004). In Finland some country to country. For example,the U.S. has from 40 per cent of the audienceshare of public service the very beginning relied on commercially-based television has been parallel to that in Germany, media competition alongside objectivity as a news France and many other EU countries (Joukko- standard. It is taken for granted that the less the viestimet 2006, 338), but there has also been con- state regulates media, the better the result for de- stantand lively criticism of PSB's Tolein the media mocracy: free news competition guaranteesdiver- market in Finland (Herkman & Viihamaa 2007,16- sity of media contentoThus, public service broad- 17). In France the state has interfered in television casting accounts for only two per cent of the operation perhaps more than in any other target American television audienceshare (Joukkoviesti- country represented in the 'Mapping Media and met 2006,338). Communication Research' project, thanks to a 148
  • 5. media policy thatregulatesprogrammingdirectly by understandthe conditions necessaryfor the emer- nationality and language(Puustinen2007, 11-12). gence of a well-functioning public service broad- It is interesting that broadcasting in Japanand caster'. They continue,that 'a weakness minority is Australia have close resemblances the European to programming, importantand sensitiveissuein Es- an model with their mixed systems of public service tonia and also in Latvia since both countries have and private commercial networks (Valaskivi 2007, large Russian-speaking communities. ...The other 18; Rahkonen2007, 22). The influence of the BBC major problem for public broadcastingin Estonia is has been important all over the world in initiating the absenceof an independent,predictable, stable, public broadcasting in the early twentieth century. and adequate system of funding' (ibid., 27). The Also the problems of Japanese Australian PSB and problemsof PSB in small countrieslike Estoniaand seemto be similar to Europe's. Japanesepublic Finland aretherefore basically problems createdby broadcasterNHK has encountereddifficulties, ow- limited resources. ing to credibility problems, political scandals, As the Estonian example illustrates, there are digitalisation and financing. NHK has a 'renewal perhaps more country-specific differences than program' to reducethe numberof employeesby ten similarities in societies,cultures,languages, markets per cent by the end of 2008. (Valaskivi 2007, 27.) A and media policies. Table 3 summarisessome na- similar renewal programmehas been enforced, for tional characteristics in media landscapes of the example, in the Finnish public broadcasting com- countries included in the 'Mapping Media and panyYLE. Meanwhile, in the Australia report Juho CommunicationResearch' project. Rahkonenemphasises pressure that liberalisa- the Television has been,and still is, the most popu- tion of media market places on public service lar medium in every target country: people spend broadcastingin general: 'Given the neo-liberalmar- most of their media time watching television (see ket economy and the keen competition, the legiti- Table 2). Television has also constructed the most macy ofnon-commercialbroadcasting no longer can influential medium for publicity. In many countries be takenfor granted' (Rahkonen2007,22-23). televisionhas beenthe leading medium for advertis- Estonia presentsan interesting exceptionamong ing. But if we estimate the relative status of each the Europeantargetcountries in its relation to PSB. mediumin relationto media landscapes, seepro- we The 19 per cent channelshareof public television in found differences among the target countries. For Estonia is remarkablyless than in other European example, Finland and Japan even today are tradi- targetcountriesor the- average EU (Salovaara-Moring tional 'newspaper countries' in which circulationsof & Kallas 2007,18-19;Joukkoviestimet 2006,338).In dailies per person are among the top five in the its strongemphasison commercialbroadcastingEs- world along with Norway, Swedenand Switzerland tonia represents typical post-communistsociety in a (Joukkoviestimet 2006, 335). the Baltic afea, where, since the collapse of Soviet Even though circulation of dailies is continu- Unionandtheregainingof independence, medialegis- ously but slowly decreasing,newspapersare still lation has supported a U.S. style liberal market by far the mostpopular channelfor massmedia ad- po.licy.As Salovaara-Moringand Kallas (2007, 26) vertising in Finland: newspapers dominate advertis- put it: '... eachBaltic statedisplays a problem com- ing by 54 per cent of the market share, substan- mon to Centraland EastemEurope:a failure to fully tially more than television's share of 19-20 per Table3. SomeNational Characteristicsin Media Landscapes(2004-2005) Finland Estonia Germany France U.S. Japan Australia' - ... Relatlvely high newspaper television, television cinema, television, mobile. Iv, television, cable-Iv magazines cinema newspaper magazines Relatively low television? print media newspaper newspaper, print media? newspaper Internet State regulation deregulation weak deregulation strong weak quite high deregulation Historical small market, independent in World War 11, strong national 'world's biggest', World War 11, small and dimension high tech, 1991, Russian federal republic identity, culture high tech, isolated Nokia minority language industries u-strategy market. conservative 'New' media falling behind, in frontline, 'neweconomy' coming to in frontline most behind, digital TV e-voting crisis 2002 frontline, developed. going onllne Minitel mobile 149
  • 6. l I cent, which againis much less than television's av- The German media landscape has be en struc- erage30 per centshareof massmediaadvertising in tured by decisionsmade by the Allies after the Sec- the EU (Herkman & Viihiimaa 2007, 18-20; ond World War that even now influence the German Joukkoviestimet 2006, 122, 334). In Japan tele- press and broadcasting which are constricted from vision still dominatesmedia markets both in terms taking form as 'total' massmedia (see Koivisto & of viewing time and advertising revenue (Valaskivi Thomas 2007,6). The FederalRepublic emphasises 2007, 27), but the very specialcharacteristic of the the regional press,and therefore 'a specificity of the Japanese media landscape the incredible boom of is German media landscape is the relatively under- mobile communication including the mobile internet, sized role of the supra-regionalparty press' (ibid., broadcasting, books,online music downloadingand 8). Even the public media in Germanyis organised even the 'virtual wallet'. Japanis the indisputable by federalstructureinsteadof by centralisedmodelo leader in mobile content developmentand approxi- New media in Germanysuffered significantly from mately two to four years ahead of Europe. (Ibid., the crises of 2002, which endedthe hype of the vir- 30-32, 38-39.) The status of each medium in such tual 'New Economy'. Since that time, media indus- country-specific characterisations is classified in tries have paid more attention to the so-called core Table 3 as 'relatively high' or 'relatively low'. Ja- business.(Ibid., 8-9.) pan is actually amongthe top countries in the world The crises of the 'new media bubble' and 3G in every media sector,and it is thereforehard to de- mobile licenses in Germanyalso upsetthe Finnish rifle any medium that would have relatively low sta- media landscapeat the beginning of the twenty-first tus in the Japanese medialandscape. century. Before that, Finland has been on the The 'statuses'of media are, of course,linked to frontline of the 'digital revolution', and the key- historical, social and cultural developmentsin each word in the media branch was convergence. But country. For example,Japanese successin the mo- more recently, media companies have focused on hile market is connectedto a post-war policy that their traditional trade instead of such things as has emphasisedtechnologicaland economic devel- mergerswith the ICT business.However, the influ- opmentand led to an information societyand 'u-Ja- ence of Nokia on the national economy is so huge pan' (Ubiquitous Japan)strategies as national en- that the ICT branchis an engine of the twenty-first deavours (ibid., 10-11,24). The samekinds of vi- century Finnish media business. In household sions or strategies have recenti y come into the Internet connections Finland has not been among world in all the target,countries one way or another, the world's flor even Europe's top countries (e.g., but there are significant differences in the commit- Joukkoviestimet 2006, 346), but Finland was the mentto the developmentof ICT. first country in the world to move completely to According to interviews in information technol- terrestrial digital television,during the year 2007. ogy, for example, Australia 'lags behind other devel- The special characteristics of the U.S. media oped countries' and 'the digital revolution is just landscapeare, of course,its leading role as an enter- [now] aboutto hit Australia' (Rahkonen2007, 17).3 tainment producerin the world and the vastness and The reasonfor this may well be the isolation of the diversity of its nationalmedia markets.A strongdo- continent, the relatively small population and the mestic market makes the U.S. media branch quite high degree of urbanisation,which in turn have led independentfrom international influences and also to a combination of conservativemedia policy and keeps it on the frontline of technological and con- concentrated media market (ibid., 18-21). Likewise, tent development(Aslama et al. 2007, 14-15). The late assimilationinto global information networks in U.S. is still unquestionably 'a television country': France can be linked to the strong maintenanceof 'Although on-line andmobile mediahavebecomein- national identity through languagelaw and cultural creasingly important, ...the statistics illustrate the protectionism. By contrast, by developing and re- crucial role of television as a medium in the U.S.' taining its own network communication system (ibid., 15-16). After becoming independentin 1991 'Minitel', averted the spread of the Internet in Estonia adopted the U.S. model of liberal media France for many years. Later, the French eagerly markets in many ways. Television also dominates adopted the Internet while European ICT enthusi- the Estonian media landscape,and cable-TV espe- asm crystallised at the EU's Lisbon meeting in cially has a relatively strong position there 2000, and today France is one ofthe top-countries (Salovaara-Moring & Kallas 2007,18-22). Rapid in EuropeanInternet connections.Nevertheless, the socialchangesand the role of the Russian-speaking cinema still hasa unique statusin Frenchmediacul- minority have been the key questions of Estonian roce.(Puustinen2007,10-12,19.) medialandscape policies (ibid., 6, 27). and 150
  • 7. Main Research Institutions countries. Especially in countries with very tradi- and Organisations tional academic institutions like France and Ger- many, much of the researchis carried out by other The country-specific characteristics in the media disciplines than those specifically called media or landscapesdiscussedabove constitute background cornmunication research.A great dealof humanistic for mediaand cornmunication research eachcoun- and social scientific media and communicationre- in try. Because the size of the population varies searchisdone, for example,in sociology,the politi- among fue target countries,fue sizesand structures cal sciences,linguistics, psychologyand fue educa- of the university systems are also quite different. tional sciences. The roots of media and communica- But there are also congruencies structuring media tion research found in more traditional academic in are and cornmunication research eachcountrystudied disciplines such as history, philosophy, sociology, in for 'Mapping Media and Communication Re- science of law, the study of literature, psychology search'. and political sciences-a fact that still affects meth- First, in all countriesmedia and communication odologies, theories and perspectives in media and research carried out by universities and other aca- cornmunication is research. demic institutions suchas polytechnical schoolsas Table 4 illustrates the size of fue acadernicinsti- well as by non-academicresearchinstitutions and tutions of media and communication education in organisations. Non-academic researchis done by eachtargetcountry. It has to be kept in mind that it public and private agenciesor by research teams in is very difficult to obtain comparabledata even for media companiesand funded both publicly and pri- the numbers of universities, BA/MA/PhD pro- vately. In each country there is a much greater de- grarnmes and professorsfor a specific discipline. As greeof private funding of mediaand cornmunication mentioned,the definition of disciplines and number researchthan public funding. This is evident in the of subjects included in the disciplines vary from broadly business-orientatedICT sector. Basically, country to country. The subjects mar also go by organisationsdoing media and cornmunicationre- different llames. searchin each country are not after all so different. Another problem is that the bigger the country, Second,in all financing of academicmedia and the more difficult it is to obtain reliable data about cornmunicationresearch shareof humanitiesand fuesekinds of numbers: the tracing all mediaand cornmu- social sciencesis marginal comparedto that of fue nicationprograrnmes fue U.S., for example,is ex- in natural sciences,cornmunicationtechnological de- tremely time consuming work, and the numbers of velopment and business research.As the U.S. re- programmes and professors change continuously. port explains it, 'comparedto other social sciences, Thereforefue datain Table 4, especiallyvis-a-vis fue communicationhas traditionally receivedless fund- U.S. and Germany,have beenculled from various ing' in general(Aslama et al. 2007,72). Hence,hu- secondarysources,and, in fue case of Germany,are manistic and social media and communication re- from sevento ten years old. Becausefue number of searchis not at the core of the academic funding universities, programmes and professorships of systemin any target country. media and communication research has steadily Third, the discipline of academic media and grown in Germany(Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 26- cornmunicationresearch undefined in many target 30), it is assumedthat fue Germannumbersin Table is Table4. SomeDetails oi AcademicMedia and CommunicationEducation and Researchat the National LevelI Finland Estonia Germany Franca U.S. Japan Australia Universitles 13 2 52 (1997) 22 c.400 c.230 37 MA/PhD programmes 27 11/1 131 (2000) -109/93* 53/39 118 Professors 42 13 160(2000) 147 --- National Nokia/ITC, newcentres formal and statecontrol, hardto strong private Non- characteristics private of excellence hierarchical unclear discern, sector, hierarchical, funding system discipline healthcomm. research industries vs. associations academy ,, ::;, ',i ,, * In joumalism and mass communication only. 151
  • 8. ~ 4 are too small. The total numbersof MA and PhD pline, but the main reasonis the richness of fue re- prograrnmes fue U.S. will algobe muchgreater in than search conductedby fue industries (Valaskivi 2007, the numbers in Table 4, which includes only pro- 42). In Japanfue Toleof research associations algO is grarnmes injoumalism andmass cornrnunication. Pre- exceptionally strong (ibid.). In countries like Japan sumably, U.S. is a leaderin mediaand cornrnuni- fue and fue U.S. where 'media hasbecomea huge busi- cation education and research fue world. Thus,Ta- in ness', media-related researchis algo big business ble 4 tells more in a generallevel aboutthe scale of (Aslama et al. 2007, 66), and the Tole of academic acadernic mediaand cornrnunication education tar- in mediaand cornrnunication research remainedmar- has gel countriesthan it doesaboutexactfigures. ginal from fue point of view of fue media industries. More interesting in Table 4 are the short de- Social scientistshave algo positioned themselvesto scriptions of fue nationalcharacteristicsof research be critical actors in society, thereby increasing the organisationsand institutions. For example,France gap betweenacademicsand industries. Among the and Germany proved to serve quite conservative target countries the critical tradition has remained and constricted academic environments for media quite strong in the U.S., France and Finland, while and cornrnunication research because their hierar- of algO Japan, in Australia and Germanymany scholars chical and introverted university structures.In Ger- see their task as constituting a critical counterforce many the postgraduate qualification process, Ha- against econornicinterestsof industry. fue bilitation, 'does not encourage scientific originality' The gap between industries and academic re- (ibid.,18). In Francethe problemhas beenthe rela- searchhas not encouraged industries to finance hu- ti ve youth of discipline and the low status of manistic and social scientific researchor education. 'Infocom' (Sciences 1 'information et de la com- de The problem has been sharply criticised by an Aus- munication)in the government controlled systemof tralian professor: 'Industry takes the graduales but acadernicresearch and disciplines (Puustinen2007, puts very little back to the journalism academy' 26-31). In both countries the identity of media and (Rahkonen 2007, 56). In Finland, the situation communication researchhas been poorly defined, changed after the Helsingin SanomatFoundation, and much of the research beensplinteredamong has basedin fue Sanoma WSOY corporation,was estab- various more traditional and establisheddisciplines lished in 2005. The Foundation has become the (Koivisto & Thomas 2007, 15, 43-44; Puustinen most prominent sponsor of humanist and social 2007, 30-32). media research Finland. Helsingin SanomatFoun- in In 'the new world', academic systems seemto dation algo funded the 'Mapping Media and Com- be less hierarchicalthan in fue bornecountriesof fue munication Research' project. (Herkman & modero Europeanuniversity, and media and com- Viiharnaa2007,47-51.) municationresearch Japan, U.S. andAustralia in fue But the difficulties in obtaining funding for aca- is in many ways more pragmatically oriented than, demic humanistic or social scientific media and for example,in Germanyand France. But this does communication researchbecome more evident in not mean that academic researchand media indus- comparisonwith technological or natural scientific tries are closely linked in fuesecountries either. On research in every target country. For example, the contrary,there seemsto be quite a gap between whereasthe Academy of Finland and prívate Finn- mediaindustriesand academicresearch every tar- in ish foundationsfinanced humanistic and social sci- gel country. The only exception might be Estonia entific mediaand cornrnunication research with some where recentsocialchanges haveencouraged ac- aU 7 rnillion euros in 2006,Nokia alone financed its re- tors in fue field to work together.In a small country searchand developmentby almost 3.9 billion euros like Estonia,humanistsand social scientistshave to in the very same year (ibid., 45). In many target look for collaborative projects if they are to obtain countries, owing to the strong economic assump- extensivefunding for larger research projects. (See tions of ICT, stateorganisedresearch funds are algo Salovaara-Moring& Kallas 2007,56-57.) nowadayschanneledmostly to information techno- It is actuallyquite surprising how separate fue are logical development by various national research acadernic humanisticand socialscientific media and programmesand semi-public foundations. For ex- cornrnunication research from mediaindustriesin the ample,fue total researchfinancial by the Academy U.S. and Japan, where cornrnunication mediain- and of Finland in 2006 was approximately 257 million dustries have an essential position in structuring euros.The share of humanistic and social scientific whole societies. In Japanthe relative modesty of media and communication research was between academic media and communication researchcan one and two per cent, with the majority of the partly be explained by the obscurity of the disci- funding allocatedto technologicaland biD sciences. 152
  • 9. Meanwhile, fue Finnish Funding Agency for Tech- cultural aspects of media and communication, and nology and Innovation (TEKES) funds research and 3) those that focus on media and communication development activities undertaken by companies technology. These three categories could be found in and research organisations registered in Finland. In all countries but their ratings and precise definitions 2006, TEKES invested 465 million euros in research vary from country to country (see Table 5). Fur- and development projects in companies, universi- thermore, the categories are not exclusive and, in ties and research institutes, but humanistic or social many cases, they overlap. For example, cultural and scientific media research had only a very limited feminist studies often combine cultural and political role in those projects. aspects with their analyses, and technological re- On a nationallevel, then, fue funding of human- search is sometimes linked to social and political istic or social scientific media and communication re- analysis as it is in the case of information society search is quite marginal in every target country and research. Thus, definitions here simply mean that dependent on prívate funding. Country-specific in- some dimension of the research appears to be more terests may arise in some approaches, however, be- prominent than others. It is also necessary to note cause they fit current economic and social conjunc- that 'political' is understood more traditionally here tures. A good example is health communication re- as 'politics' or 'policy' than in representation or au- search in fue U.S., which does not at all have fue dif- dience analyses of cultural or feminist studies, ficulties that are discussed above (Aslama et al. where 'political' often refers to identity politics or 2007,73,83-84). constructionofmicro-levelpowerrelations. In Estonia almost all media and communication Main Approaches in Media and r:search see~~d to have. some connection with s?- C " t" R h clal and pol1tlcal queshons because of the rapld ornrnurnca Ion esearc ... changes m soclety after the collapse of fue SovIet Many generalisations made in this paper are based Union: 'Media is analysed as part of society and on interviews rather than on statistics, but in defin- not as a separate unity. The rapidly changing soci- ing fue main research approaches in target countries ety creates new problems to which the academic the conclusions are based mostly on various statis- community must respond.' (Salovaara-Moring & tical analyses found in research publications. The Kallas 2007, 63.) Specific social and political problem is that primary data, methods and fue clas- themes in Estonia are fue Russia-speaking minority sifications behind these statistics have been so het- and adaptation to fue post-communistic era (ibid., erogeneous that it is hard to make sophisticated 61). It is thus not an overstatement to claim that all comparisons between countries. Nevertheless it is academic media and communication research in Es- still possible to give a rough overview of fue main tonia has a strong connection to social and political approaches in media and communication research. questions. It is notable that some topics that are In most countries the main approaches found in highly popular in the Nordic countries, such as media and communication research can be classified popular culture, feminist media studies and organi- in one of three general categories: 1) those that em- sational communication, are dealt with only in fue phasise political and social questions in relation to student MA theses but otherwise remain in Estonia media or communication, 2) those that emphasise unpublished (ibid., 62). A special national character- Table5. MainApproaches in Media and CommunicationResearchin 2006 Flnland Estonla Germany France u.s. Japan Australia MostpopularlhernesMediaand Politicall Massmedia; ICT; Mediaand Massmedia; ICT; Mediaand Journalism in academicjournals popular societal Communi- popular culture; ICT; Advetising popularculture; and newsmedia; (or books) culture; cationin Politicall andPR* Mass media* Communication Politicallsocietal; general societal studies; Journalism Culturalstudies studies National Feminist Semiotics, Humanities, Social con- Diversity, National- Cultural studies, characteristics critique, Ethnicily, Unübersicht- structivism, MCR, Media Asian, Political Cultural Post- lickeit, Online Newtechnology,ellects Western economy studies socialism National * The U.S. and lapan data are basedon published books (not articles) and are Iherefore not directly comparable to other countries. 153
  • 10. - istic in Estonia is the influence of the famous Tartu Germany and France have quite different rela- schoolof semiotics(ibid., 64). tions to media and popular culture studies. While In Finland media and popular culture proved to suchapproaches popular in France,the research are be the most popular topic in academicthesesespe- has beenconcluded more under the distinctive na- cially at fue MA level (Herkman & Viihamaa 2007, tional traditions rather than under the label of 57), but a later analysis of academic articles pub- Anglo-American cultural studies.This has meant a lished in English reveals that Finnish scholarsem- more elitist-based and more protectionist attitude phasisealgo social and political themes,especially vis-a-vis commercial popular culture, and the ap- in their postgraduatework. There were algo clear proachhas tberefore been highly critical in nature. differences among Finnish university departments However, since the 1990s,Frenchmedia and com- and disciplines: the humanities emphasisedmedia munication research opened up to international has and popular culture, while social science empha- influences, and a new generation of scholars has sised social and poli tic al as well as journalism re- emerged with a different relationship to popular search(ibid., 57-59). However, it becameclear that culture studies. (Sumiala-Seppanen 2007, 99-101.) in Finland, it is possible to speak of 'linguistic' or Today the point of view of social constructivism 'cultural' turns in media and communication re- dominates French media and communication re- searchbecause cultural and feminist studies have search,and the fascination with new media tech- algohad sucha greatinfluence on more socially ori- nologieshas broken throughto fue extent that it can entedmasscommunication research. be classified as the most popular theme in France Popular culture was algoa popular research sub- (Puustinen2007, 63-69). ject in Japanand Australia. Japanhas a strong re- Research into newmedia technology-especially searchtradition into Japanesepopular culture and online communication-is steadilybecoming more media history (Valaskivi 2007, 72-75), while Aus- common in Germanyas well, even though,the con- tralia is world famous in Anglo-American cultural servative and hierarchical academicsystemempha- studies (Rahkonen2007,58-62). However, in Japan sises more traditional approachessuch as research today popular culture studies are often connected into mass communication and media effects to 'new media' phenomenasuch as anime, digital (Koivisto & Thomas 2007,42-43). Germannational gamesand World Wide Web (Valaskivi 2007, 66). characteristics include the strikingly high share of Therefore,Japanese academicmedia and communi- humanities-for example,linguistics -among media cation researchin many casesis highly focused on and communicationscholars' orientation (ibid., 32- new information and communicationtechnologyas 33) as well as 'the lack of clarity' (Unübersicht- is the researchby private organisations.It is worth lickeit) in the field (ibid., 15). Koivisto and Thomas recalling that the Japanesedata here are based argüe that the conservatism of universities has led solely on books published on media and communi- to difficulties inserting cultural studies into a Ger- cation issuesand the ranking of approachesmight man context, and authors see that multidisciplinary be quite different had the ranking beenmadeby aca- cultural studiescould serve asa way out of the cul- demic articles. Overall, Japanese academic media de-sacof the 'deadlocked political constellation of and communicationresearch modestcomparedto is fue Germanuniversity' (ibid., 66-71). the private sector, with strong roots in traditional Lack of clear definition could algo describe the western mass communication research (ibid., 67- U.S. media and communication approachesin that 69). In Japan technological approaches are very fue research field is so huge and diverse that it is al- strong,and recently there have beenefforts to pro- most impossibleto make any generalisations.How- mote collaboration betweenacademic and private ever, there are some approachesthat are obviously research as well as effects to develop genuinely stronger than others in the U.S. Traditional mass interdisciplinary projects betweentechnologicaland communicationresearch(MCR) is still perhapsthe socialapproaches (ibid., 82-83). most popular approach found in U.S. media and The national characteristic of Australian media communication research, even though interest in and communication research is pragmatism new communication technology -especialIythe (Rahkonen 2007, 57). Another key aspect in Aus- Internet -increases continuously. National charac- tralia is the popularity of the political economyre- teristics of the U.S. are the continuous popularity sulting from 'fue exceptionallyconcentrated owner- of media effects researchand the strong emphasis ship structure'of Australian media. 'The Australian on researchinto advertising and public relations. version of politic al economy is algo known as the (Aslama et al. 2007, 83, 110-111.)It is evident that "media matesapproach".' (Ibid., 60.) the remarkablerole of commercialmedia industries 154
  • 11. in the U.S. has led to these kinds of national em- manistic approaches are more 'cultural' in that they phases in media and communication research. rely on qualitative methods and put more emphasis A common feature in every target country is an on theories and concepts of symbolic reality than emphasis on empirical research, The status of em- do social approaches, which are more 'materialist' pirical research is naturally highest among prívate and have stronger traditions in the use of quantita- research organisations, but academic media and tive methods and the reliance on empirical data communication research is algo mainly based on em- about social realities. These differences, however, pirical analyses, even though the academy discusses are ill-defined and by no means all-inclusive. Quite theoretical questions more than does prívate, indus- the contrary. It seems that discourse analysis and try-based applied research. Yet solely theoretical in- textual analysis as well as criticism of post-mod- vestigations seem to be quite marginal in today's ernism and post-structuralism have today become academy. According to interviews, the most empiri- part of almost all humanistic and social media and cal emphasis among the target countries is found in communication research in fue target countries. the U.S. and Australia, while theory has the strong- est support in France and Japan, and perhaps in Germany. Future ChaUenges to Research In most countries quantitative methods still have Even though there were many differences among the the strongest position in empirical analysis, but target countries, those scholars interviewed seemed qualitative methods have increased their popularity to be strikingly unanimous about the future chal- since fue 1980s and fue so-called 'cultural' or 'lin- lenges to academic media and communication re- guistic turn' (see e.g., Bonnell & Hunt 1999). Pri- search. The challenges can be grouped in five inter- vate research organisations still rely on quantitative related categories that were crystallised in fue U.S. methods, especially on surveys, Jet algo in the report (Aslama et al. 2007, 121). The same catego- academy quantitative methods such as laboratory ríes can be found in one form or another in every re- experiments, surveys and content analyses evi- port: dently domínate in the U.S., Estonia, Germany and , , ..e 1 Th h . d .. c angmg me la envuonment Japan. In France and Fmland qualItat1ve methods seem to have an exceptionally strong position in 2. National vs. international orientation academic media and communication research, but 3 Th 1 , h ' ." b d ' . h h .e qua Ity o f t he researc h t lS 1mpress10n lS ase on mterv1ews rat er t an being the result of statistical analyses. 4. Affirming the institutional status of the disci- The differences among methodologies and the pline confrontation between theory and empiricism vary ." b th d.. 1 . d h th t d . t th 5. Improvmg relatIonsh1ps between academia and y e lSC1p mes an approac es a omma e e . .m d ustry nat10nal contexts. Aslama et al. (2007, 138-139) ar- gue that tension between humanistic and social sci- The first challenge is fue rapidly changing media en- entific approaches is especially characteristic of the vironment that has been discussed in more detail in U.S. media and communication research, but it is the section 'The media landscapes'. In the Japan re- evident that the same kind of distinctions can be port Katja Valaskivi (2007, 79-80) summarises the found in most of the target countries. There are changes with the term 'convergence', which com- clear differences between humanistic media (film and bines technological, economical and cultural dimen- television studies, literature studies, linguistics, art sions of 'converging media systems' (cf. Murdock history, etc.) and social scientific media (mass com- 2000; Iosifidis 2002). In particular changes in com- munication research, media sociology, journalism munication technology and markets have been so studies) and communication approaches, even rapid that many scholars distrusted the ability of though fue 'linguistic' or 'cultural turn' and the in- academic research to react fast enough: the academy fluences of cultural and feminist studies have per- seems to lag behind in technological, social and eco- haps made disciplines more similar than ever before nomic changes. On the other hand it is possible to (see e.g., Ferguson & Golding 1997; Murdock ask to what extent academic research should react to 1997). rapid changes in fue media environment and to what The separation of social scientific 'research' and extent its task is to 'slow clown' or 'denaturalise' humanistic 'studies' algo draws lines between the continuous talk about change and the techno- theory and empiricism as well as between quantita- logical hype? Considerable continuity can algo be tive and qualitative methods. It was clear that hu- found in media environments, while the social his- 155
  • 12. - tory of the mediahas demonstrated changes that are in their world history The Human Web(2003). Aca- not always so 'radical' or 'revolutionary' as they are demic humanistic and social scientific media re- claimed to be in contemporarydiscourses(see e.g., searchhas become a 'second-class citizen', with Winston 1998; Mattelart 2001; Briggs & Burke short-term financing and employments that do not 2002). support substantialresearchprojects, which in tum The secondchallenge is linked to the first that are essentialfor renewing the discipline. Todaythe deregulation and liberalisation of the media have majority of academicmedia researchis carried out opened national media markets -at least to some by prívate funding that emphasises industry-based extent-to intemational or global competition. Con- applied studies instead of so-called basic research. centrationof media ownershipandmergersof media Therefore, the key question in all target countries companieshave beenone result of this processand proved to be how to affirm the conditions for self- have made national media marketsmore dependent containedacademic research. on global media corporations (see Croteau & The fourth challenge,affirrning the institutional Hoynes 2001; Doyle 2002). At the sametime aca- status of the discipline, is also linked to the previ- demic media and communicationresearch been has ous challenges.It is obvious that the relatively low quite nation-bound because of its commitmentto institutional statusgoeshand in hand with a low de- nationallanguages cultural boundaries well as and as gree of academic financing. Many scholars inter- to national media and education policies. Many viewed believed that strengtheningfue institutional scholars interviewed saw a contradiction between statusof fue media and communicationdiscipline in the emphasisin media researchon nationalperspec- the academy would therefore meanmore money for tive and media industries'emphasison intemational research.But there are also other dimensionsto fue issues. 'lack of disciplinary clarity'. As the country-spe- According to the France report, cultural protec- cific reports of fue 'Mapping Media and Communi- tionism and accentuating Frenchlanguagein univer- cation Research'project demonstrate, fueTe pro- are sity policy is a problem in fue intemationalisation found disagreements defining media and commu- in of French media and communication research nication researchas an academic discipline. Disa- (Puustinen 2007, 74-77). The situation is com- greementsare in many casesso fundamentalthat it pletely different in Finland, for example, where really seemsto be a 'mission impossible' to define publishing in English is fue most important means any clear-cut discipline of media and communica- of achieving merit in fue academy.Interviewees,es- tion research.From this point of view, requirements pecially in small or isolated countries like Finland, for the congruency of the field can also be seenas Estonia and Australia, seemedto long for intema- belonging to paradigm battles and a threat against tional research collaboration. Again it is possibleto plurality or diversity of research; therefore, many ask if ranking by publications in intemational ref- scholars, especially those from humanistic or cul- ereedjoumals -a habit adopted from natural sci- tural approaches,were quite happy with the cur- ences-is truly the best way to evaluatehumanistic rentmixed situationin mediaand communication re- or social media and communication research. To searchin fue academy. what extent should media and communication re- The fifth challenge is to overcome the gap searchbe national in, for example,and take part in betweenacademicmedia research and media indus- public debateson media's Tole in society or fue na- tries. Many scholarsboth in fue academy and in pri- tion state? vate organisations voiced fue desirefor increased co- The third challenge,guaranteeing high quality of operation between industry and the academy.Aca- research,is intimately linked to complaints about demicswere expected take media industries'prac- to the poor financing and resourcesof contemporary tical orientationmore seriously, vice versa,while and academic media and communication research.As industries were expectedto leam more substantial shown in the section 'Main research institutions thinking from the academy instead of purely and organisations',humanistic and social scientific economy-oriented investigations.Someinterviewed mediaand communicationresearch not at the core is truly believed thatacademicresearch help indus- can of1he academyin any of the target countries. This tries to contextualisecurrentchanges fue media en- in is not surprise.Since the SecondWorld War, devel- vironmentandincreaseknowhow,for example,about opmentin all research haveemphasised large-scale, qualitative research methods.Academic researchers institutionalised and bureaucratically applied thought that they in tum could benefit from indus- projects whose goal is economic progress or mili- tries' hugeresources updatedmicro-level exper- and tary success, McNeill and McNeill demonstrate as tise in media and communicationtechnologies,pro- 156
  • 13. duction and marketing. The problem in developing of 'creative industries' among academic institutions collaboration between the academy and industry is (e.g., Rahkonen 2007, 66-67). The key question here the critical task of the academy, which was still seen is to what extent co-operation between fue academy as central by many scholars. The sub-projects and industry is possible without losing the critical showed that it is now trendy to speak, for example, potential of academic research. Notes References 1. The main work behind this paper has therefore As1ama, Minna et al. (2007) Mapping Media and been done by the researchersand research teams Communication Research in the U.S. Research of fue country-specific sub-projects. For work we11 Reports 2/2007. He1sinki: University of He1sinki, done I wou1d 1ike to thank Minna As1ama,Ka11e Communication Research Centre, Department of Siira, Rona1dRice and Pekka Aula from the U.S. Communication. project; Juho Rahkonenfrom the Australia project; Baldwin, Thomas et al. (1996) Convergence.Integrating Inka Salovaara-Moring and Triin Kallas from the Media, Information & Communication. London: Estonia project; Katja Valaskivi from the Japan Sage. project; Liina Puustinen and Johanna Sumia1a- Bonnell, Victoria E. & Hunt, Lynn (eds.) (1999) Beyond Seppanenfrom the France project; Juha Koivisto the Cultural Turn. Berkeley: University of Cali- and Peter Thomas from fue Germany project; and fornia Press. Miika Viihiimaa from fue Fin1and project. I worked Briggs, Asa & Burke, Peter (2002) A Social History of as the project leader of fue 'Mapping Media and the Media. From Gutenberg to the Internet. Ox- Communication Research' as well as a leader of ford: Blackwell Publishers. the Finland sub-project. In the U.S. project, Pro- Croteau, David & Hoynes, William (2001) The Busi- fessor Philip Napoli served as an advisor and Katy ness of Media. Corporate Media and the Public Pearceas a researchassistant;in fue Franceproject Interest. London: Pille Forge Press. Aura Lindeberg and Elina Perttula worked as CurTan,James (2002) Renewing the Radical Tradition, research assistants; in the Japan project Hiromi in CurTan, James: Media and Power, 127-165. Tsuji worked as a researchassistantwith Professor London: Routledge. Noboru Soneharaservingas an advisor. In fue Aust- Doyle, Gillian (2002) Understanding Media Economics. ralia project the University of Queensland (Pro- London: Sage. fessor Jan Servaes and assistant Levi Obifiojor) Ferguson, Marjorie & Golding, Peter (eds.) (1997) and in the Japan project the National Institute of Cultural Studies in Question. London: Sage. Informatics in Tokyo (Professor Sonehara) were Hassan, Robert (2000) The Space Economy of the collaborative units. In the U.S. project the Convergence, Convergence: The Journal of University of California and fue Donald McGannon Research into New Media Technologies 6(2000): Communication ResearchCenter at Fordham Uni- 4 (Winter), 18-35. versity were fue main units of collaboration. I would Hemondhalgh, David (2002) The Cultural Industries. alBo 1ike to thank all those media researchexperts London: Sage. who were interviewed in each country. Without Herkman, Juha & Viihiimaa, Miika (2007) Viestintiitutki- them fue whole project would have been a mission muksen nykytila Suomessa. Viestinnan laitoksen impossible. For more information about the tutkimusraportteja 1/2007. Helsinki: Helsingin project, see the Appendix. yliopisto, Viestinnan tutkimuskeskusCRC, Viestin- 2. The research reports of each country have been nan laitos. published on CRC's web Bite: http://www.valt. losifidis, Petros (2002) Digital Convergence:Challenges helsinki.fi/blogs/crc/en/mapping.htm for European Regulation, in The Public Javnost Reports can alBo be downloaded from the Helsin- 9(2002): 3, 27-48. gin Sanomat Foundation's web Bite: http:// Jakubowicz,Karol (2004) A SquarePeg in a RoundHole: I www.hssaatio.fi/en/completed_projects.html The EU's Policy on Public Service Broadcasting. ,3. Scholars interviewed in 'Mapping Media and In Bondebjerg, lb & Golding, Peter (eds.) 2004: Communication Research' project disagree, for European Culture and the Media, 277-301. Bris- example, the United Nation's E-government tol: Intellect Books. Survey2008, which values Australia really high in Joukkoviestimet2006 -Finnish Mass Media. Helsinki: global e-governance. See http://unpanl.un.org/ Statistics Finland. intradoc/groups/public/documents/UN/UNPANO Kaitatzi-Whitlock, Sophia (1996) Pluralism and Media 28607.pdf. Concentration in Europe. Media Policy and In- 157
  • 14. ~ dustrial Policy, European Journal of Communi- Picard, Robert (1989) Media Economics: Concepts and cation 11(1996): 4,453-483. Issues. Newbury Park/California: Sage. Koivisto, Juha & Thomas, Peter (2007) Mapping Com- Puustinen, Liina (2007) Mapping Media and Commu- munication and Media ~esearch: Germany. Re- nication Research: France. Research Reports 51 search Reports 6/2007. Helsinki: University of 2007. Helsinki: University of He1sinki, Commu- Helsinki, Communication Research Centre, De- nication Research Centre, Department of Com- partment of Communication. munication. Küng, Lucy et al. (1999) Impact of fue Digital Revolu- Rahkonen, Juho (2007) Mapping Media and Commu- tion on fue Media and CornmunicationsIndustries, nication Research: Australia. ResearchReports71 The Public Javnost 6(1999):3, 29-48. 2007. Helsinki: University of He1sinki, Commu- Lowe, Gregory Ferrell & Hujanen, Taisto (eds.) (2003) nication Research Centre, Department of Com- Broadcasting & Convergence: New Articulations munication. of the Public Service Remit. Goteborg: Nordicom. Salovaara-Moring, Inka & Kal1as, Triin (2007) Map- Marsden Christopher T. & Verhulst, Stefaan G. (eds.) ping Communication and Media Research: Esto- (1999) Convergencein European Digital TV Regu- nia. Research Reports 3/2007. Helsinki: Univer- lation. London: B1ackstonePress Ltd. sity of He1sinki, Communication Research Cen- Mattelart, Armand (2001) Histoire de la société de tre, Department of Communication. l'information. Paris: Decouverte. Sumiala-Seppanen,Johanna (2007) Cultural Studies in McNeil1, J.R. & McNeill, Wil1iam H. (2003) The Hu- France -Receptions and Rejections, in Puustinen, man Web. The Bird's-Eye View of World History. Liina 2007, 97-101. New York: W.W. Norton. Valaskivi, Katja (2007) Mapping Media and Commu- Murdock, Graham (1997) Base Notes: The Conditions nication Research: Japan. Research Reports 41 of Cultural Practice, in Ferguson, Marjorie & 2007. He1sinki: University of He1sinki, Commu- Go1ding, Peter (eds.), 86-101. nication ResearchCentre, Department of Cornmu- Murdock, Graham (2000) Digita1 Futures: European nication. Te1evisionin the Age of Convergence,in Wieten, Winston, Brian (1998) Media Technologyand Society. Jan et al. (eds.) (2000) Television Across Europe. A History: From the Telegraph to the Internet. A Comparative Introduction, 35-58. London: Sage. New York: Routledge. JURA RERKMAN, D.Soc.SC., Academy of Finland Postdoctoral Researche1; Depart- ment of Communication, PL 54, FI-OOOI4 University of Helsinki, juha.herkman @helsinki.fi 158
  • 15. r Appendix Facts about the 'Mapping Media and CommunicationResearch' The project'sbudget was a total of 275,000euros (for sevencountries).Tbere were nine researchers allin plus five researchassistants tour team leaders.Togethertheir work was a little less than five researcher- and years (60 months).The U.S. sub-project's team,consisting of two team leaders,two researchers, research a assistantand an advisor, was the largest,while the Australian project (one researcherfor six months), the Finnish (a project leaderand one researcherfor five months)and the Estonian(two researchers, together working five months)were the smallestsub-projects. Table. Employees 'Mapping Media and Communication in Research' Leaders Months Researchers Months Assistants Months Finland 1 2 1 5 -- Estonia -2 5 -- Germany -1 9 1 2 France 1 1 1 5 2 2 U.S. 2 2 2 11 1 2 Japan -1 6 1 2 Australia -1 6 -- CornmunicationResearch Centre CRC at the University of Helsinki is carrying out the samekinds of stud- ies on mediaand communicationresearch Belgium, the Netherlandsand Russiabetweenauturnn2007 and in spring 2008. More sophisticatedsummariesand meta-analyses ofall country-specific sub-projects will be completed by the end of 2008.1 Tbe budgetsof theseprojects are total some 150,000 euros,for which tour researchers three research and assistantsareworking. This paper therefore,gives only a brief surnmary of the results of the 'Mapping Media and Cornmunication Research'project from auturnn2007. Since auturnn 2007 the director of the CRC and head of the projectshas beenProfessorHannuNierninen. Note 1. The analysis will be done by Juha Koivisto and Peter Thomas, researchers from the German sub-project. 159