438. McQuail D. (2005) McQuail’s Mass Communication Theory. 5th ed. London: Sage.
439. McQuail D. (2010) McQuail’s Mass Communication Theory. 6th ed. London: Sage.
440. McQuail D., Siune K. (eds.) (1998) Media Policy: Convergence, Concentration, and Commerce. London: Sage.
441. Mickiewicz E. (1999) Changing Channels: Television and the Struggle for Power in Russia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
442. Mickiewicz E. (2008) Television, Power and the Public in Russia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
443. Mihelj S., Huxtable S. (2018) From Media Systems to Media Cultures. Understanding Socialist Television. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
444. Miller T., Kraidy M.M. (2016) Global Media Studies. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
445. Miroshnichenko A. (2014) Man as Media: The Emancipation of Authorship. Moscow: [n. p.].
446. Mosco V. (2017) Becoming Digital. Towards a Post-Internet Society. UK: Emerald Publishinng.
447. Napoli P.M. (2003) Audience Economics: Media Institutions and the Audience Marketplace. New York: Columbia University Press.
448. Negroponte N. (1996) Being Digital. New York: Vintage.
449. Nerone J. (ed.) (1995) Last Rights: Revisiting Four Theories of the Press. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
450. Nieminen H. (2016) Digital Divide and Beyond: What Do We Know of Information and Communications Technology’s Long-Term Social Effects? Some Uncomfortable Questions. European Journal of Communication 31(1): 19–32.
451. Nieminen H. (2019) Inequality, Social Trust and the Media. Towards Citizens’ Communication and Information Rights. In: Trappel J. (ed.) Digital Media Inequalities: Policies against Divides, Distrust and Discrimination. Sweden: Nordicom, pp. 43–66.
452. Nienstedt H.W., Russ-Mohl S., Wilczek B. (eds.) (2013) Journalism and Media Convergence. Vol. 5. Berlin, Boston, MA: Walter de Gruyter.
453. Noam E. M. (2018) Managing Media and Digital Organizations. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
454. Nordenstreng K. (2004) Ferment in the Field: Notes on the Evolution of Communication Studies and Its Disciplinary Nature. Javnost — The Public 11(3): 5-18.
455. Nordenstreng K. (2009) Media Studies as an Academic Discipline. In: Thussu D. K. (ed.) Internationalizing Media Studies: A Reconsideration. New York: Routledge, pp. 254–266.
456. Nordenstreng K., Paasilinna R. (2002) Epilogue. In: Nordenstreng K., Vartanova E., Zassoursky Y. (eds.) Russian Media Challenge. 2nd ed. Helsinki: Kikimora Publications, pp. 189–198.
457. Nordenstreng K., Thussu D.K. (eds.) (2015) Mapping BRICS Media. New York: Routledge.
458. Nordenstreng K., Vartanova E., Zassoursky Y. (2002) Russian Media Challenge. 2nd ed. Helsinki: Aleksanteri Institute.
459. Norris P. (2001) Digital Divide: Civic Engagement, Information Poverty, and The Internet Worldwide. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
460. Park S. (2017) Digital Capital. London, Unified Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan.
461. Parker G.G., Van Alstyne M., Choudary S.P., Foster J. (2016) The Platform Revolution: How Networked Markets Are Transforming the Economy and How to Make Them Work for You. New York: WW Norton.
462. Pasti S. (2010) A New Generation of Journalists. In: Rosenholm A., Nordenstreng K., Trubina E. (eds.) Russian Media and Changing Values. London: Routledge, pp. 57–75.
463. Pasti S., Ramaprasad J. (2017) Contemporary BRICS Journalism: NonWestern Media in Transition. NY: Routledge.
464. Pavlik J., McIntosh S. (2016) Converging Media: A New Introduction to Mass Communication. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
465. Picard R. G. (1989) Media Economics: Concepts and Issues. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
466. Plantin J. C., Punathambekar A. (2019) Digital Media Infrastructures: Pipes, Platforms, and Politics. Media, Culture & Society 41(2): 163–174.