Mass media in Sweden
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The mass media in Sweden has a long tradition going back to the 1766 law enacting freedom of the press.
The press is subsidized by the government and is owned by many actors, the dominant owner being Bonnier AB. Swedish television and radio were until the mid-1980s a government monopoly, which slowly has been eroded despite resistance, with a call for prohibition of private ownership of satellite dish receivers.
Until 2019, public service media was financed by a special fee levied on owners of television or radio receivers. Reporting ownership was voluntary, but television sellers were obliged to report purchase to the government, and the government also had a special service of agents, with equipment capable of detecting emissions from television receivers, patrolling residential areas in order to catch unreported receivers. In 2018, the Riksdag voted to instead make paying for public service mandatory for all people having an income. The change was supported by all parliamentary parties except the Sweden Democrats.[1]
Swedish media has mechanisms for self-regulation, such as the Press Council.
Press
The Swedish press is subsidized by the government through press support. Originally this was directly distributed through the political parties to their supporting newspapers, but nowadays subsidies are more direct in form, and are tied to certain requirements, e.g. a minimum of 2000 subscribers. Support also exists in indirect form in the shape of partial tax-exceptions.[2]
The Swedish Press is self-regulated through the Public Press Ombudsman, or Allmänhetens Pressombudsman and the Swedish Press Council, or Pressens Opinionsnämnd. One example of this is that Swedish media follow a principle of not disclosing the identities of suspected criminals. There was some controversy when Dagens Nyheter on 27 September 2003 published the name and picture of Mijailo Mijailović, who was the suspected assassin of Swedish foreign minister Anna Lindh.
Freedom of the press in Sweden dates back to 1766 when it was enshrined in a law enacted by the
The Swedish newspaper with the widest circulation is the evening newspaper
Through its subsidiary Bonnier Tidskrifter AB, Bonnier AB also controls many of Sweden's most popular
Sweden also has many large organizations which almost all produce membership magazines with a wide readership. The biggest ones, with readership figures above 300 000, include
With the rise of the internet, many magazines have ceased publication, see Category:Defunct magazines published in Sweden. Newspaper weeklies have also declined, but one example of a nation-wide weekly is sv:Kvällsstunden.
Television
Television trials from the
SVT and its two channels dominated television for a long time. In 1987 the first commercial channel,
In the early 1990s,
Sweden was an early adopter of digital terrestrial television, officially launching it in April 1999. The analogue shutdown of the SVT and TV4 signals started in September 2005 and was completed in late 2007.
Four companies and five channels dominate the Swedish television viewing:
- SVT with SVT1 and SVT2
- TV4 (owned by Telia)
- TV3 (owned by Modern Times Group)
- Kanal 5 (owned by Warner Bros. Discovery)
The prospect of the digital shutdown has caused SVT and TV4 to start several new channels. SVT have
Two dominating networks of premium content exists:
The main pay television distributors are: Com Hem (cable), Boxer (terrestrial), Viasat (satellite) and Canal Digital (satellite). There are also several smaller cable networks, most notably Tele2Vision and Telia Digital-tv. As of 2006, it is estimated that 50 percent of the households receive their television signals from a cable network, 30 percent from a regular aerial and 20 percent using a satellite dish.[3]
Radio
National radio is dominated by public service company Sveriges Radio (SR), which is funded through the same fee that is collected for television sets. The sale of commercial radio licenses began in the early 1990s, though commercial radio existed before this through local stations in the larger cities (närradio).
SR have four national channels:
Two systems exist for private radio: community radio (närradio) and local commercial radio (PLR, privat lokalradio).
When the PLR licenses were auctioned in the early 1990s several different local stations appeared. The licensees would consolidate over the years and in 2006 almost all licenses were owned by Modern Times Group or SBS Broadcasting Group, since SBS bought Fria Media in February 2006.
Most stations are part of a network, the two largest being Rix FM (36 stations, MTG) and
Journalistic bias
-
Political party sympathies among Swedish journalists in 2011.Liberal Party (7 %)Sweden Democrats (1 %)Moderate Party (14 %)(2 %)Other (2 %)
The Department of Journalism and Mass Communication (JMG) at
After the elections 2010, the researcher Kent Asp studied more than 1000 articles from Sweden's major newspapers and found a strong bias towards the political right. 43% of all articles written about the
As regards to foreign policy issues, Swedish media has often been reporting biased towards the
I don't think either that Swedish media have any requirement whatsoever regarding fairness when it comes to the U.S. election. We have no reason to be fair and present both sides views as we would have done in a Swedish election.
(Swedish: "Jag tycker heller inte att svenska medier har något som helst krav på sig på opartiskhet när det gäller valet i USA. Vi har ju ingen anledning att vara opartiska och redovisa båda ståndpunkter på samma sätt som vi skulle göra i ett svenskt val.")
After this statement Uddén was put into quarantine by the management of Sveriges Radio for the rest of the U.S. election.[6] Uddén is currently the correspondent for Sveriges Radio in the Middle East. Regarding the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Uddén has stated in an interview that "in order to be able to describe the conflict honestly you have to side with the weaker part [i.e. the Palestinians]" (Swedish: "För att kunna beskriva konflikten ärligt måste man ta part med den svagare sidan.")[7]
Controversies
Crime reporting
The mainstream Swedish media has been accused of not sufficiently covering the Bombings in Sweden in its daily news.[8]
Ideological and political bias in reporting
The reporting in Swedish media has sometimes, by journalists, been accused of bias and cover-ups, in particular as regards Swedish immigration policy and the societal and financial costs associated with it.[9] Criticism has focused on accusations that those in the media who shape public opinion often do this based on ideological constructs and exhibit a lack of awareness of current societal problems, often pointing to the fact that journalists and editors predominantly reside in segregated low-risk upper middle-class areas.[9] Well-known Swedish journalists have echoed criticism regarding cover-ups, with Janne Josefsson calling it "one of the worst betrayals we journalists have made ourselves guilty of"("ett av de värsta sveken vi journalister gjort oss skyldiga till").[10] He also notes that critics were unjustifiably silenced through racism allegations.[11] A former high-profile News-presenter of the Swedish State Television resigned her position and made a public statement that she did so due to the bias in State TV news-reporting and the belittling and racism accusations launched at critics.[12]
In April 2005, Andreas Carlgren from the Center Party published a report saying that the State Media are politically biased through direct political control, predominantly by the Social Democratic party. He accused the Social Democrats of having a long-term party policy to fill strategically important positions in the public-service media with persons loyal to the party.[13] This has resulted in media-reporting being susceptible to being directed by political considerations.[14]
In December 2010, the ruling Centre-Right Alliance was heavily criticized when they implemented a law that required that all new public service products needed to be pre-approved by the government before they could be approved. Mats Svegfors, the CEO of the Swedish public service radio channels called this "unconstitutional".[15]
Female genital mutilation reports
In June 2014,
Lists
- List of Swedish newspapers
- List of Swedish magazines
- List of Swedish television channels
- List of Swedish radio stations
- List of Swedish language writers
- List of Swedish companies
See also
- Telecommunications in Sweden
- Culture of Sweden
- Freedom of information legislation in Sweden
- Freedom of the press and freedom of expression in Sweden
- Internet in Sweden
- Internet censorship and surveillance in Sweden
- Open access in Sweden
- Ombudsman
References
- ^ "Beslut om ny Public-service-avgift" (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. Retrieved 2019-05-25.
- ISBN 978-1125805886, ASIN B000PZN7VY.
- ISBN 91-85229-10-5.
- ^ Gothenburg University. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 16, 2020. Retrieved 2020-07-16.)
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help - ^ Kent, Asp. "Starkt negativ rapportering om Mona Sahlin i Expressen". Dagens Nyheter. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- Ekot. Archived from the originalon 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
- ^ Wahlström, Johannes (2005). "Israels regim styr svenska medier". Ordfront Magasin (12). Archived from the original on September 11, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
- ^ Maddy Savage (12 November 2019). "Sweden's 100 explosions this year: What's going on?". BBC. Stockholm.
- ^ a b "Journalisterna mörklägger sanningen om invandrarna", DN, Publicerat 2008-04-08"
- ^ 2010-05-16, Swedish Radio documentary "Tensta ligger mitt i Sverige",URL
- ^ Mannen bakom avslöjandena Archived 2009-06-04 at the Wayback Machine HD 10-02-2008, "vi stämplade rasist i pannan på de som protesterade"
- ^ Elisabet Höglund: Därför slutade jag på Aktuellt Archived 2011-08-02 at the Wayback Machine DN, 10 November 2008
- ^ (S)veriges ofria television Svenska Dagbladet, Publicerad: 6 april 2005
- ^ I STATENS OCH PARTIETS TJÄNST Svensk public service under 80 år Archived 2010-11-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Kritik mot statlig förhandsprövning av public service". Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- ^ "Alla 30 flickor i klassen var könsstympade". Norrköpings Tidningar (in Swedish). 20 June 2014. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ "FGM in Sweden: School where every single girl in one class underwent procedure exposed". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-05-12. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- The Daily News. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ "Nyheten som var en nyhet". Norrköpings Tidningar (in Swedish). Retrieved 17 October 2014.
Vi skrev inte om var och när könsstympningen genomförts.
- ^ Richard Orange; Alexandra Topping (27 June 2014). "FGM specialist calls for gynaecological checks for all girls in Sweden". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
The pilot in Norrköping, which grabbed headlines when it was wrongly reported that an entire school class of girls had been subjected to FGM, 28 in the most severe fashion [...] Sweden was the first country in the world to ban FGM in 1982, and in 1999 the ban was extended to include circumcision carried out in other countries.
- ^ "Stympad rapportering om könsstympning och nya medievanor" (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. 28 June 2014. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
Further reading
- Kenneth E. Olson (1966), The history makers: The press of Europe from its beginnings through 1965, Louisiana State University (LSU) Press, pp 33–49, ISBN 978-1125805886, ASIN B000PZN7VY.
External links
- Swedish Press Council & Press Ombudsman
- "Media Landscapes: Sweden", Medialandscapes.org, Netherlands: European Journalism Centre