Abstract

Global platforms have radically changed institutional dynamics within the media industry. In this study, we explore how national media organisations manoeuvre in an increasingly uneven playing field. Combining theoretical perspectives from platform studies and the media policy field approach, we analyse how asymmetrical platform power impacts industry-policy relations in a small-nation context. We find that national players collectively frame the power of global platforms as a potential threat to the media sector and to democracy. In this framing, all the players – regardless of size or market position – define themselves as ‘small’ to signal a common threat and mission across the industry. Being ‘small’ however does not entail the same for all players, which results in different action logics. We also find that industry players use collective framing to protect existing support schemes and to legitimate the call for new ones, while they seek international collaboration to impact regulation of global platforms.

Highlights

  • The power of global platforms, such as Facebook and Google, has increasingly become the subject of public and scholarly scrutiny (Andrews, 2019; Evens and Donders, 2018; Mansell and Steinmueller, 2020; Van Dijck et al, 2018)

  • The asymmetrical power relations that occur when global companies enter national markets are arguably even more profound for media players in small nations, as their operation lacks the benefits of economies of scale even without competition from global platforms (Doyle, 2013)

  • We argue that a combined perspective gives us the tools for exploring how media players manoeuvre in a disruptive field, what skills they use to defend positions and how industry actions are contextualised by more deeply entrenched platform structures

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Summary

Introduction

The power of global platforms, such as Facebook and Google, has increasingly become the subject of public and scholarly scrutiny (Andrews, 2019; Evens and Donders, 2018; Mansell and Steinmueller, 2020; Van Dijck et al, 2018). Keywords Facebook, industry, media policy field, platforms, policy, power, regulation, small nations

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