Impact
1. The holistic approach on sufficiency of knowledge about the transformation of the European mediascapes provided society and policy makers with new information on what should be improved in the ways of collecting and assessing the media related data.
2. The data collection and assessment from the perspective of potential risks for deliberative communication should lead to a wisdom-based media governance.
3. The fuzzy-set analysis of the media environments revealed a high degree of complexity and variety among the countries, leading to the conclusion that there is no universal model possible for forecasting ROs; the success of media policy in reality depends on how well the countries’ peculiarities are taken into consideration.
4.Bibliographical database of over 5600 entries reflects the level of produced knowledge on the ROs for deliberative communication, enabling the comparison of 14 countries’ research in four domains (Journalism, Legal and ethical regulation, Media related competencies, and Media usage patterns) by their main topics, number and types of publications, languages, peer reviewing, indexing in databases, and several other variables. And the methodology chapters in both monographs present novel ways for critically analysing the quality of existing data and for detecting knowledge gaps.
5. The best- and worst-case scenario models were created for each participating country, focusing on risk factors. The scenario logic of the “Wisdom-based media governance“ is constructed along two axes: knowledge quality and cooperation + interaction between different agents. The scenarios enable researchers to assess possible risks for deliberative communication and democracy in each country and also draw more general conclusions.
The most substantial social impact is related to the concept of wisdom-based media governance and the holistic overview of circumstances that define the status of deliberative communication, providing guidance for decision makers to change the mindset from reactive media policy to proactive media governance. Providing national research agencies, policy makers, the governments and media industry with the information about the areas where knowledge gaps and lack of information appear, the results of this project help to coordinate information gathering to pay more attention to these gaps and missing information