Abstract
In September 2014 the recently established Swiss Federal Media Commission trailed its first report reflecting on policy measures supporting Swiss media.1 But it was not welcomed. The report innocently suggested financially supporting national news agencies, innovation in the media sector and outstanding journalistic projects. While some journalist organisations agreed with the general claim that the media needed support, the representatives of the large publishing companies indignantly rejected any supportive action by the Swiss government as undue intervention into the press and media freedom. Media policy, it turned out once again, is a thorny policy field, even if the purpose is — as in the Swiss case — to provide support for the media.
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© 2015 Josef Trappel
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Trappel, J. (2015). Media Subsidies: Editorial Independence Compromised?. In: Barnett, S., Townend, J. (eds) Media Power and Plurality. Palgrave Global Media Policy and Business. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137522849_12
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137522849_12
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