Pirate Waves
Polish Private Radio Broadcasting in the Period of Transformation 1989–1995
Abstract
This book reveals the value and significance of pirate radio, with a special focus on local radio stations that broadcast illegally in Poland in the early 90s. It shows that many of them, like in other countries from the region, began as non-commercial, community-oriented initiatives. Several sources of information were used to maximize the potential of the study, especially documents gathered from public institutions, press articles, interviews with radio representatives, and decision-makers who influenced the shape of the broadcasting system. The analysis of these sources supports the conclusion that, although the pirates left a lasting legacy, they lost out in the licensed regime driven by market logic.
Keywords
1989–1995; Bogusława; broadcast media; Broadcasting; community media; Dobek; Doliwa; media in CEE; media in transition; media policy; non-commercial media; Ostrowska; Period; Pirate; Polish; Private; Radio; Transformation; Urszula; WavesDOI
10.3726/b19336ISBN
9783631871546, 9783631871553, 9783631871560, 9783631817001, 9783631871546Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2022Series
Studies in Communication and Politics, 155Classification
Political science and theory
Sociology