Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 11 - 24
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.035.10737Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 25 - 38
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.036.10738Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 39 - 51
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.037.10739Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 53 - 65
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.038.10740Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 67 - 79
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.039.10741Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 81 - 94
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.040.10742Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 95 - 104
https://doi.org/10.4467/22996362PZ.19.041.10743Media Research Issues, Volume 62, Issue 3 (239), 2019, pp. 111 - 115
Słowa kluczowe: digital citizen journalism, alternative journalism, participatory journalism, Facebook, citizen journalism, social media, conflict in Syria, media para-news agency, Ghouta Media Center, GMC, information channels, journalism, new technologies, whistleblower, Edward Snowden, Christopher Wylie, second generation whistleblowing, Big Data, European borderlands, internationalization of media, transboundary media and journalism, print media, press editors, media monitoring, political extremism, Principality of Liechtenstein, mass media, print media, interwar period, occultism, esoteric press, Spiritual Knowledge, magazine, Polish pre-war press, quantification, quantified self, self-tracking, algorithmization, commodity self-government, statistics power, datatization