M E D I A W A T C H E D I T I
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Tanja Petrović
A long way home: Representations of the Western Balkans in Political and Media Discourses |
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Brankica Petković, Marko Prpič, Neva Nahtigal, Sandra B. Hrvatin
Media Preferences and Perceptions - A Survey Among Students, Ethnic Minorities and Politicians in Slovenia |
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Mitja Velikonja
Titostalgia – A Study of Nostalgia for Josip Broz |
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Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin, Brankica Petković
You call this a media market? The Role of the State in the Media Sector in Slovenia |
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Brankica Petković, Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin, Lenart J. Kučić, Iztok Jurančič, Marko Prpič, Roman Kuhar
Media for Citizens |
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Mitja Velikonja
EUrosis |
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Jernej Rovšek
The Private and the Public in the
Media |
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Sandra B. Hrvatin, Lenart J. Kučić, Brankica Petković
Media Ownership |
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Roman Kuhar
Media Representations of Homosexuality |
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Dragan Petrovec
Violence in the Media |
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Majda Hrenjak, Ksenija H. Vidmar,
Zalka Drglin, Valerija Vendramin, Jerca Legan, Urša Skumavc
Making Her Up |
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Gojko Bervar
Freedom of Non-accountability |
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Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin
Serving the State or the Public |
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Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin, Marko Milosavljević
Media Policy in Slovenia in the 1990s |
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Breda Luthar, Tonči Kuzmanić, Srečo
Dragoš, Mitja Velikonja, Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin, Lenart J. Kučić
The Victory of the Imaginary Left
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Matev Krivic, Simona Zatler
Freedom of the Press and Personal Rights |
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Karmen Erjavec, Sandra Bašić-Hrvatin,
Barbara Kelbl
We About the Roma |
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Tonči Kuzmanić
Hate-speech in Slovenia |
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Darren Purcell
The Slovenian State on the Internet |
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Breda Luthar
The Politics of Tele-tabloids |
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Marjeta Doupona Horvat,
Jef Verschueren, Igor Ž. Žagar
The Pragmatics of Legitimation |
For the
Slovenian Edition of the Media Watch website click here!
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Darren Purcell The
Slovenian State on the Internet
eBook
(1.797kB, pdf) |
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The development of the Internet has allowed for many
claims about the future of democracy and governance. At one extreme,
there are those who see the end of the state coming in the globalized
world we inhabit. Others will point to computer technology and invoke
the images of 1984, George Orwell’s futuristic look at a state employing
communications technology for control.
In this paper, I argue that the Internet is usable by the state
as well as individuals and groups to serve its purposes. These efforts
will be studied from the framework of the creation of space, particularly
concepts of representations of space and representational spaces.
The Internet facilitates the creation of images of place that are
strategically used to influence perceptions of place.
In the case study, I examine Slovenia’s government websites to
demonstrate that a state does have a need to control information,
to project images that are aimed to induce activities like
tourism, investment, diplomacy, and establish an unequivocal
state identity. The government sites demonstrate that through
the use of symbols, propaganda cartography, carefully worded
text, and other iconography, representations of space and representational
spaces are created that support the goals of the Slovenian
state, which are placed in the context of the country’s position
in the system of global capitalism.
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