@incollection{discovery1522732,
         address = {Novi Sad},
           month = {September},
            year = {2014},
          editor = {D Nedelkovi{\'c} and S Sremac and D Gruhonji{\'c} and N Kne{\vz}evi{\'c}},
          number = {1},
       publisher = {Centar za istra{\vz}ivanje religije, politike i dru{\vs}tva},
            note = {This version is the version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions.},
       booktitle = {Uloga medija u normalizaciji odnosa na zapadnom Balkanu},
           pages = {11--30},
           title = {Independent and citizen media, post-war and post-print},
        keywords = {Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, former Yugoslavia, media, newspapers, Serbia, social networks, Southeast Europe, television},
          author = {Gordy, ED},
             url = {https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1522732/},
        abstract = {As the states of the former Yugoslavia moved rapidly out of isolation in 2000, they were confronted with the challenge of adapting to technological and structural changes in media that had occurred over the previous decade. This adaptation took place in the context of a number of legacies that remained from the war period. Electronic and social media claimed audience and cultural space from older media institutions that were in decline, and as they did several new opportunities seemed to become available. Each of these opportunities, however, carries a corresponding risk.}
}