[1]
Baehr, H. and Gray, A. 1997. ‘Material Girl’: The Effacements of Postmodern Culture. Turning it on: a reader in women and media. Arnold.
[2]
Berger, A.A. 2020. Media and communication research methods: an introduction to qualitative and quantitative approaches. SAGE.
[3]
Browne, D.R. and Uribe-Jongbloed, E. 2013. Introduction: Ethnic/Linguistic Minority Media - What their history reveals, how scholars have studied them and what we might ask next. Social Media and Minority Languages: Convergence and the Creative Industries. E. Haf Gruffydd Jones, ed. Multilingual Matters.
[4]
Byerly, C.M. 2004. Feminist interventions in newsrooms. Women and media: international perspectives. Blackwell.
[5]
Collins, R. et al. 2006. Media technologies, markets and regulation. Open University.
[6]
Compaine, B.M. and Gomery, D. 2000. Who Owns the Media?: Competition and Concentration in the Mass Media Industry. L. Erlbaum Associates.
[7]
Couldry, N. and Littler, J. 2008. The Work of Work: Reality TV and the negotiation of neo-liberal labour in The Apprentice. Rethinking documentary: new perspectives,new practices. Open University Press.
[8]
Croteau, D. et al. 2012. Media/society: industries, images, and audiences. SAGE.
[9]
Croteau, D. et al. 2012. Media/society: industries, images, and audiences. SAGE.
[10]
Croteau, D. et al. 2012. Media/society: industries, images, and audiences. SAGE.
[11]
Curran, J. et al. 2013. Impacts and Influences: Media Power in the Twentieth Century. Routledge.
[12]
Curran, J. 2002. Media and power. Routledge.
[13]
Dahlgren, P. and Olsson, T. 2008. Facilitating political participation: Young citizens, Internet and civic cultures. International handbook of children, media and culture. SAGE.
[14]
David Hesmondhalgh and James Curran eds. 2019. Media and society. Bloomsbury Academic.
[15]
Devereux, E. et al. 2011. Behind the headlines: Media coverage of social exclusion in Limerick city - the case of Moyross. Understanding Limerick: social exclusion and change. Cork University Press.
[16]
Devereux, E. 2014. Understanding the media. Sage.
[17]
Devereux, E. 2014. Understanding the media. Sage.
[18]
Devereux, E. 2014. Understanding the media. Sage.
[19]
Devereux, E. 2014. Understanding the media. Sage.
[20]
Devereux, E. 2014. Understanding the media. Sage.
[21]
Downey, J. 2006. ’The media industries: do ownership, size and internationalisation matter? Media production. Open University Press.
[22]
Downey, J. 2006. ’The media industries: do ownership, size and internationalisation matter? Media production. Open University Press.
[23]
Drury, P. 2014. An saol ar phláinéad an táblóideachais. Scéal scéil: rúndiamhra na meán. B. Delap, ed. Cois Life Teoranta.
[24]
Du Gay, P. et al. 2013. Doing cultural studies: the story of the Sony Walkman. SAGE.
[25]
Du Gay, P. and Open University 1997. Production of culture/cultures of production. Sage in association with the Open University.
[26]
Eli M. Noam 2016. Who Owns the World’s Media?: Media Concentration and Ownership around the World. Oxford University Press.
[27]
Farrel Corcoran 2004. RTÉ and the Globalisation of Irish Television. Intellect Books.
[28]
Flynn, R. 2014. How Important shall Public Service Media be in the European Digital Media Age? (2014).
[29]
Freeden, M. 2003. Ideology. Oxford University Press.
[30]
Garnham, N. 2003. A Response to Elizabeth Jacka’s ‘Democracy as Defeat’. Television & New Media. 4, 2 (May 2003), 193–200.
[31]
Guyot, J. 2007. Minority Language Media and the Public Sphere. Minority language media: concepts, critiques and case studies. Multilingual Matters. 34–51.
[32]
Habermas, J. 1999. The Public Sphere. Media studies: a reader. Edinburgh University Press.
[33]
Hall, S. 1973. Encoding and decoding in the television discourse. (1973).
[34]
Hancock II, J.H. 2013. Brand This Way: Lady Gaga’s fashion as storytelling context to the GLBT community. Fashion in popular culture: literature, media and contemporary studies. Intellect.
[35]
Herbert, D. 2005. Media publics, culture and democracy. Media Audiences. Open University Press.
[36]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2006. Media organisations and media texts: production, autonomy and power. Media production. Open University Press.
[37]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2006. Media production. Open University Press.
[38]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2006. Media production. Open University Press.
[39]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2005. Producing Celebrity. Understanding media: inside celebrity. Open University Press in association with The Open University. 97–134.
[40]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2007. The cultural industries. SAGE.
[41]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2007. The cultural industries. SAGE.
[42]
Hesmondhalgh, D. 2007. The cultural industries. SAGE.
[43]
Heywood, A. 2012. Political ideologies: an introduction. Palgrave Macmillan.
[44]
Horsti, K. et al. eds. 2014. National conversations: public service media and cultural diversity in Europe. Intellect.
[45]
Hourigan, N. 2003. The campaign for Irish language television. Escaping the Global Village: Media, Language, and Protest. Lexington Books.
[46]
Jacka, E. 2003. ‘Democracy as Defeat’: The Impotence of Arguments for Public Service Broadcasting. Television & New Media. 4, 2 (May 2003), 177–191.
[47]
Jensen, K.B. 2012. A handbook of media and communication research: qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Routledge.
[48]
Lacey, N. 2002. Media institutions and audiences: key concepts in media studies. Palgrave.
[49]
Lindlof, T.R. and Taylor, B.C. 2002. Qualitative communication research methods. Sage Publications.
[50]
Mac Murchú, I. and Mac Eachmharcaigh, N. 2008. Súil an Tionscail. TG4@10: deich mbliana de TG4 = ten years of TG4. Cló Iar Chonnachta. 155–163.
[51]
MacKeogh, C. 2012. Carol MacKeogh interviews Mary Raftery, Director of States of Fear (1999) and Cardinal Secrets (2002) lth. 145-150. Documentary in a changing state: Ireland since the 1990s. Cork University Press.
[52]
Mason, J. 2007. Generating qualitative data: Observation, documents and visual data. Qualitative researching. Sage Publications.
[53]
Mayer, V. et al. 2009. Production studies: cultural studies of media industries. Routledge.
[54]
McChesney, R.W. 2003. The political economy of international communications. Who Owns the Media: Global Trends and Local Resistances. Zed Books, Limited.
[55]
McGuigan, J. 2002. The public sphere. The uses of sociology. Blackwell.
[56]
Murdock, G. and Golding, P. 2005. Culture, communications and political economy. Mass media and society. Hodder Arnold.
[57]
O’Brien, A. 2015. Producing Television and Reproducing Gender. Television & New Media. 16, 3 (Mar. 2015), 259–274. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476414557952.
[58]
O’Connell, E. 2013. Towards a template for a linguistic policy for minority language broadcasters. Social Media and Minority Languages: Convergence and the Creative Industries. E. Haf Gruffydd Jones, ed. Multilingual Matters.
[59]
Paterson, C. et al. eds. 2016. Advancing media production research: shifting sites, methods, and politics.
[60]
Rafter, K. 2014. Voices in the crisis: The role of media elites in interpreting Ireland’s banking collapse. (2014).
[61]
Stevenson, N. 2003. Media, cultural citizenship and the public sphere. Cultural citizenship: cosmopolitan questions. Open University Press.
[62]
The myths of encroaching global media ownership | openDemocracy: 2001. https://www.opendemocracy.net/media-globalmediaownership/article_87.jsp.
[63]
Thompson, J.B. 2011. The Media and the development of modern societies. The media and modernity: a social theory of the media. Polity Press.
[64]
Thornham, S. 2010. Media and feminism. Media and society. Bloomsbury Academic.
[65]
Toynbee, J. 2006. The media’s view of the audience. Media Production. Open University Press.
[66]
Ursell, G. 2006. Working in the Media. Media production. Open University Press.
[67]
Walsh, K. et al. 2015. Hearing Women’s Voices? Exploring women’s underrepresentation in current affairs radio programming at peak listening times in Ireland. (2015).
[68]
Wasko, J. et al. 2011. The handbook of political economy of communications. Wiley-Blackwell.
[69]
Watson, I. 2003. Broadcasting in Irish: minority, language, radio, television and identity. Four Courts.
[70]
Watson, I. 2007. Recent and current trends in Irish language broadcasting. Mapping Irish media: critical explorations. University College Dublin Press.
[71]
Watson, I. 2003. The Birth of a Station. Broadcasting in Irish: minority, language, radio, television and identity. Four Courts.
[72]
Zoellner, A. 2016. Detachment, pride, critique: Professional identity in independent factual television production in Germany and Britain. Production studies, the sequel!: cultural studies of global media industries. M.J. Banks et al., eds. Routledge.
[73]
Zoonen, L. van 1994. Feminist media studies. Sage.
[74]
van Zoonen, L. 1991. Feminist perspectives on the media. Mass media and society. E. Arnold.