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REPORTING & WRITING ABOUT THE EUROPEAN UNION

REPORTING & WRITING ABOUT THE EUROPEAN UNION. EU Integration, Politics’ Transformation & Journalism Response. European Journalism, AUTH Ioanna M. Kostopoulou Vagia-Danai Panopoulou November, 2018. outline. The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated

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REPORTING & WRITING ABOUT THE EUROPEAN UNION

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  1. REPORTING & WRITING ABOUT THE EUROPEAN UNION

  2. EU Integration, Politics’ Transformation & Journalism Response European Journalism, AUTH Ioanna M. Kostopoulou Vagia-Danai Panopoulou November, 2018

  3. outline • The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated • EU Journalism An overview on the difficulties, problems & practices • European integration Towards a European public sphere • Summary Future challenges of EU reporting

  4. The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated • EU Journalism An overview on the difficulties, problems & practices • European integration Towards a European public sphere • Summary Future challenges of EU reporting

  5. European union • EU occupies a central position in the politics & economic life of its 28 members & the world • The legitimacy of the EU’s action was/is trenchant & the EU pubic has never been so opinionated about the EU project as it is now • Citizens understand what effect the EU Commission, the Parliament & the council of Ministers have on their lives • The relationship between the EU, transnational democracy & professional Journalism

  6. Many countries joined the EU since 1958 • 1958 Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands • 1973 Denmark, Ireland, United Kingdom • 1981 Greece • 1986 Portugal, Spain • 1995 Austria, Finland, Sweden • 2004 Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia • 2007 Bulgaria, Romania • 2013 Croatia • “The connection between democracy and nation-states was not necessary but historically contingent” Jürgen Habermas • Nation states still carry much of their political, economic and cultural weight EUROPEAN political integration

  7. 19 member states joined the Eurozone Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands , Ireland, Greece, Portugal, Spain, Austria, Finland, Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Slovakia, Slovenia • …and had to deal with the consequences of the Euro crisis EUROPEAN economic integration Source: Bankrate

  8. The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated • EU Journalism An overview on the difficulties, problems & practices • European integration Towards a European public sphere • Summary Future challenges of EU reporting

  9. Definition of EU journalists: Editors & reporters writing the news & taking decisions that influence EU information gathering & selection processes for European governance Their working environment • Commercial & institutional constraints • organizational culture & editorial line • acts of strategic political communication to gain influence EU journalists: who are they?

  10. What they need • a knowledge-base for European politics • accurate material which is usable news copy • linkages to European political institutions • access to official documents/experts/quotable figures/politicians Barriers to effective coverage • Difficulty in finding adequate ‘newsworthiness’ within European politics • Resources committed to support European influence a journalist’s information gathering possibilities

  11. Source strategies =mobilization & agenda-setting activities, targeted at journalists • Political actors have vested interests in cases of unpopular legislation • EU institutions as political actors • more EU than ‘normal’ correspondents • target communications at topical specialists • compete with national political actors for the attention of EU correspondents • EU communication is considered worse than national governments • Hierarchy in shaping information available to journalists National > regional > European actors > supra-international Source strategies: Political actors vs. EU institutions

  12. Routines & practices of Journalismto local political cultures & systems • Different forms of professionalism & Journalism • EU: a “common problem” for a continent of journalists • Media’s responsibility for the EU’s “democratic deficit”, visibility & “communication deficit”. • Until the economic crisis: national media covered the EU very little • During the crisis: lack of understanding of the issues, the mechanisms, lack of sufficient staff Eu journalism i

  13. Eu journalism ii • Vast amount published about & by the EU: announcements, briefings, interviews • Think tanks in Brussels pour out analyses & advice • Journals & websites: “up-to-the minute”, distant from their subject to be critical • Public: sporadically interested in politics & public institutions • Times of crisis & important decisions: the attention reaches a peak • Good times: news from Brussels is first to disappear from newspapers & TV • News media have the responsibility of covering the EU

  14. news “All news is local” “News from nowhere” Transnational media See their mission, their business model Coverage with little or no national focus Reuters, Bloomberg, AP, AFP The Economist, The Wall Street Journal BBC, CNN • Journalists bring their nation with them • Brussels journalists: miss what these institutions do • How far they are useful to the national interest: losers, winners, opponents, allies • Europe an adjunct to the nation, “speaks to itself”, a chamber where each nation can blame

  15. What shapes media coverage? I European journalism and its relationship to politics • Factors external to news production (the supply of information produced by political actors’ agenda-setting activities + EU’s quality of information provision) • Factors internal to news production (journalists’ reporting practices + their own agenda-setting targets & campaigns) • Journalistic views on media performance • External factors: amount and type of information that political actors target at journalists, journalists’ perceptions of the information quality supplier by EU institutions

  16. What shapes media coverage? II • Internal factors: journalists’ experiences on news reporting, who do they attempt to influence through opinion-leading in commentaries and by campaigns • Short- VS long-term consequences of major events Political and economic events shape short-term; dominant views shape long-term • Different aspects of political communication Infrastructure, readership’s demand, source strategies, reporting, commentating, political role, advocacy • Journalists’ perceptions on the frequency of political actors’ source strategies

  17. EU Journalism is in a various circle, is boring & difficult • Reporters & editors do not report from Brussels • People do not want to read news from Brussels • “Talking seriously about EU politics does not win votes” • How can the general public think the importance of EU? Starting from zero • What about some basic knowledge? • Little public awareness about everyday EU matters • European citizens know much more about the political life in White House than Brussels Does it have to be boring & complicated?

  18. The gap in understanding • Technical & complex decision-making pace • Not well versed in economics & finance • How to translate something complicated into simple words • The focus of the reporting changed: from Brussels to other cities in Europe • Widened gulf between journalists and the EU • Genuine interest about: new taxes, austerity measures, welfare cuts • Viewers & readers: demanding & skeptical

  19. “An EU report says”, “according to an EU proposal without explaining what the mysterious EU is • The EU is not part of “normal” politics • EU political process: distant, cold, strange • Insecurity about how the EU functions • European Commission: the only EU institution that has the right to propose new laws • Council of ministers: is composed of the ministers from the 28 member states’ governments • European Parliament: directly elected by the European citizens every 5th year • The council & the parliament amend the commission proposal & adopt the law. the eu has decided

  20. The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated • EU Journalism An overview on the difficulties, problems & practices • European integration Towards a European public sphere • Summary Future challenges of EU reporting

  21. What about a truly European public sphere? • The most dramatic crisis that the Eurozone has passed through since its creation is threated mostly through national interests & needs • Habermas concept of the EPS: pure public interest, free from private or nationalist interests • Europe & its crisis: far from the interests of the man in the street • Two different Europes: the Europe of the market and the Europe of citizens Countries still matter

  22. Did politics transform? • Different degrees of integration of member states into EU processes • Democratic & communication deficit Politicians blame the media for the EU’s democratic deficit and its lack of visibility, resonance and legitimacy; EU elites see better communication through national media as the best way to improve their legitimacy • Adequate political communications are essential to ensure effective links between political institutions and citizens • Multi-levelling and trans-nationalization of governance

  23. 1990s pressure: more open & democratic union • “European public sphere”: cure for the European union’s democracy deficit • European democracy & integration deficit: resolution through the formation of a pan-European political public sphere (Habermas) • The idea of a common European public sphere is inconceivable • Realistic goal: to pursue the Europeanisation of various national public spheres • Integration- positive elites VS more critical led to the emergence of populist movements • Pan-european public sphere or national than pan-european interests? EUROPEAN PUBLIC SPHERE I

  24. Participation, legitimacy, globalization, question of identities • The EU as we have it today will NOT produce a ‘European public sphere’ about matters concerning EU member states • Press performance as an indicator of how national political contexts and different media formats constrain the role of the press in contributing to a Europeanization of national public spheres • Resistance When journalism stops being inadequate for the purposes of politicians, it has ceased to exist. EUROPEAN PUBLIC SPHERE II “The emergence of a European sphere of publics requires the dissemination of a European news agenda that becomes part of the everyday news-consuming habits of European audiences, to an extent that publics come to understand citizenship and belonging as at least in part transcending the nation-state.” Philip Schlesinger

  25. Pioneers of a new kind of reporting in the first EU decades • Brussels: crossroads where different journalistic cultures met & worked • Jean Monnet, Paul Henri Spaak, AltieroSpinelli • 1980s new generations of journalists, distant attitude • EU: legitimate source of political & economic power • 2000s next generations of journalists, critical approach, public disillusionment with the EU • 2008 aggressive, euro currency, crisis • Public relations officials as overprotected of their masters The pioneers & the crisis

  26. Euro crisis: challenge to European integration in 60 years • Testing the structures & powers of the EU, Eurozone • Group of interrelated economic crises • European news coverage: central role in shaping public perceptions, implications for identity & integration • Coverage: limited, elite oriented, national frames • Euro crisis coverage: personalized around political leaders • The missing European citizen What is the crisis about?

  27. The EU faces many forms of professional journalism and challenges the existing forms of political journalism • Political contexts such as the EU demand new kinds of journalism • Journalists highlight limitations in information-provision due to: the EU’s technocratic style, the complexity due to the number of countries and issues involved, the remoteness of EU institutions and their press offices • Correspondents from new member states are seen as ‘agents of Europeanization’ • Limited sense of emerging ‘Europeanization’ among journalists • National news coverage is embedded in specific national and cultural contexts: at times of crisis, conflict, or unique events, national news coverage often differs across countries (e.g. Euro crisis) Journalism response to EU integration

  28. National politicians: pass the buck on unpopular decisions • The EU institutions: unhelpful in making the EU understandable, poor at communication • The “highlights” or “news” from the early 2000s • Too many cooks in the communication kitchen • Every country wants to make a cultural & linguistic mark in the union • Who speaks on behalf of the EU? • The world is like this: The information “jungle”

  29. The coverage of the EU is difficult for Journalism • The Union & its institutions devoid of the dramas • Unknown officials to most Europeans • Slow, complex & hard to grasp processes • Popular media could convey the central EU issues • Polemical & brief coverage • The crisis forced cuts on the news media • EU information depended on freelancers & fixers • Less expensive workforce, the correspondents replaced Who cares? Commoner: Just think. Which one of those stories do you believe? Woodcutter: None make any sense. (Rashomon, Akira Kurosawa, 1950)

  30. Transnational journalism & the EU I • Journalism’s re-contextualization A broader frame of reference provided by theories of transnational democracies and public spheres is needed • One of the preconditions for a European public sphere • Transnational newspapers in English targeted at elite or business readerships (e.g. Financial Times Europe, International Herald Tribune Europe, Wall Street Journal Europe, European Voice)

  31. Transnational journalism & the EU II • Journalists receive significantly more information mobilized from EU institutions, political parties, interest groups and campaign & protest groups, than from national and regional actors • Limited but emergent ‘Europeanization’ of journalism carried by transnational newspapers serving specialist audiences and to a limited extent by European correspondents on the national press • Increasing similarities in the transnational news coverage of the EU during routine periods • Rather small potential of transnational media to diminish the alleged democratic deficit

  32. The European Union How is the EU understood, reported & communicated • EU Journalism An overview on the difficulties, problems & practices • European integration Towards a European public sphere • Summary Future challenges of EU reporting

  33. A series of changes in EU sixty year history • Economic crisis: encouraged politicians & officials for “more Europe” • Fiscal coordination at the center of the Eurozone • Centrifugal pressures • Popularity of the anti- EU parties • Far right & far left parties: “Less Europe”, no EU at all • EP real drama & debate: the right for the EU to exist • Media struggling to engage their public with the EU • A large step forward: Journalism which wants to interest the public More or less Europe

  34. European Journalism or many journalisms?

  35. EU integration journalism is important • For Democracy to function: we need to understand how, when and why political decisions are taken, to debate political alternatives, to hold representatives • Media is a link between political power and the citizen • Correspondents & freelance journalists • Brussels- based reporters cover the big stories. No time to cover the many steps of the EU legislative process • Give EU questions the attention they deserve • Generalist and specialist reporters start incorporating the EU into everyday reporting Take-aways I

  36. The EU is a problem for journalism, and journalism is a problem for the EU • Future challenges: new member states, creation of new nations • Journalists would be able to ‘Europeanize’ more if politicians improved their own communication efforts and made European governance more relevant to citizens • Creation of a European public sphere through transnational media Take-aways II

  37. THANK YOU! Ioanna & Valia

  38. Plus: sources • Lloyd, J. & C. Marconi (2014), Reporting the EU: News Media and the European Institutions • Sigrid Melchior (2017), A Reporter’s Guide to the EU • R. G. Pickard (2015), The Euro Crisis and the Media: Journalistic Coverage of Economic Crisis and European Institutions • P. Statham (2008), Making Europe news: How journalists view their role in media performance • R. Kunelious (2008), Journalism and the EU: A relationship in contexts

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