In this article, I apply the four dimensions of media systems proposed by Hallin and Mancini (2004): structure of the media market, political parallelism, journalistic professionalism, and the role of local government through media policy. Two new dimensions – geography and a sociocultural context – are deemed important and therefore included for understanding the media system, which is based on the idea of a nation-state. Though the literature on media systems is rich, there has been little research on the position of minority-language media within these national systems (Zabaleta et al., 2014a). The examination of generalisable and comparable findings induces a focus on the structural properties and relationships in which “societies were equated with nation-states” (Hamelink, 2014: 41). On the other hand, the nation-state as a unit of analysis lacks transnational features stemming from globalisation of media industries (Esser & Pfetsch, 2004).
Following Zabaleta and colleagues (2019), this article focuses on media systems as a varied set of news organisations within a community of language and culture and spatially defined. Instead of being a subsystem of the Finnish media system, the locality is considered to be a media system in its own. The study was inspired by research on islands, sometimes called nissology or islandology. Edquist and Holmén (2015) demonstrate that islands, with natural boundaries and sharp edges, offer a particularly good set of samples for exploring the links between geography and the sociocultural context, the relationships of the different groups of people in society and their habits, traditions, and beliefs – in short, a shared identity and sense of history. This study fills a gap, since not much has been written academically about the media system in Åland other than an article on the competition between the two newspapers and their media innovations (Lindén, 2015) and a book chapter on how the newspapers use history and identity to attract an audience (Lindén, 2017). A history was also published of
Åland received its status as an autonomous part of Finland in 1921, affirmed by the League of Nations decision known as the Åland Convention. For more than 600 years (from around the twelfth century until 1809), Åland had been part of the Swedish Empire, as had been the whole of what became Finland. After a century under Russian rule (1809–1917), many people would have been happy to reunite with Sweden, and for some years, the islands – due to their strategic position in the Baltic Sea – became a geopolitical pawn. Finland refused to relinquish Åland after the Russian Revolution enabled Finnish independence. The compromise was semi-independence, to protect the Swedish language and local culture. Today, Åland is a territorially-defined area with fixed systems that cement and form linguistic and social structures, sharing similarities with areas in Belgium and Switzerland (McRae et al., 1997). The region has its own legislature, parliament (Lagtinget), and government (Landskapsregeringen), with 16 municipalities, the smallest one having slightly more than 100 inhabitants. The political system is based on multiparty pluralism. In the 2019 local elections, representatives of eight parties were elected to the 30 parliamentary seats; the largest party, with nine seats, is the centrist party, followed by the liberal party. One seat went to a small populist party, Ålands Framtid [the Future of Åland].
Åland's autonomy includes the right to pass laws in areas related to the internal affairs of the region, including media policy, and to exercise its own budgetary power. There is no popular support for full independence, except for Ålands Framtid, who wants “a sovereign, neutral and demilitarized microstate in the ever growing and more and more respected European family of microstates” (Ålands Framtid, 2017).
Only in 1954 did Åland get its own blue, yellow, and red cross flag, followed by stamps in 1984. In 2006, the Internet domain suffix “.ax” was established, offering an opportunity to celebrate identity online, just like the Faroe Islands (“.fo”) and Greenland (“.gl”). These examples represent concepts of a national symbolic order, the complex set of public symbols that “invoke, transport, and define claims to a shared national identity” (Nieguth & Raney, 2017: 87).
Åland has branded itself as the Islands of Peace, and pacifism has become second nature to the population (Holmén, 2015). The autonomy of Åland as a peaceful and sustainable political solution has also attracted considerable attention from countries facing demands from their minority populations for more influence. Åland has been presented as an example of an arrangement through which a territorial conflict between two states – Finland and Sweden – was solved in a peaceful way (Suksi, 2013), and it has been proposed as a conflict solution model for Iraq (L. Anderson & Stansfield, 2010) and also as a model in comparison with other European regions (Daftary, 2000; Loughlin & Daftary, 1999). The heritage objects of Åland have also been compared to heritage-promotion initiatives (imagined heritage) on other islands, such as Shetland and Svalbard (Grydehøj, 2010).
In a survey among decision makers and journalists (Lindén, 2017), the strongest perceived indicator of Ålander identity was the Swedish language (4.7 on a 5-point scale) followed by the autonomy and demilitarisation (4.5 each), the shipping industry (4.4), and the archipelago (4.3). These indicators are far more important than being born on the islands (2.8). Language as key identity indicator is also accentuated in the national anthem, “Ålänningens sång” [“Ålander's song”], adopted in 1922. It ends with the following words: “Loudly shall it sound, our Swedish language/Spoken with an urging voice/Enlighten our path like a sea mark of flames/Show us where we belong/Show us where we belong”. In a survey by Bogdan State (2009), respondents rated Swedish language skills as most important, while white skin and Nordic birth were considered to be least important.
While seemingly isolated on an island, the people on Åland – a commercial seafaring micro-nation – are closely connected to both Sweden and the global shipping industry. Immigration has become a key feature of success, as the economic activity, such as the fishing and farming industries, are dependent on low-cost manual labour. Political parties and the media have decided to ensure that immigration is framed as a positive trend. This is an example of externalities of a functioning media system.
There is one main research question motivating this study: What are the specific features of the media system in Åland? To be able to answer that, I rely on the analysis of three sets of data:
interviews with nine different people – the businessperson Anders Wiklöf, three journalists (two female, one male), three politicians (two female, one male), and two local historians (both male) – focused on the media system and the present actors (2014); a two-part survey ( and the source document of the media policy programme [Mediepolitiskt program] and transcriptions of the political debate that followed after the programme was presented in 2018.
The empirical aspects of this study consist of semi-structured interviews and surveys focused on local journalists and decision-makers from the region's sixteen municipalities, as well as the local parliament. Interviews were conducted in Swedish and in person in January, July, and December 2014, recorded, and transcribed by a language service provider. Though the interviews were made a few years ago, the media system has remained stable; thus, the results are still considered valid. Texts were broken down according to themes so that data could be compared, conceptualised, and categorised. After that, statements were interpreted and contextualised within broader frames of reference instead of just providing a categorisation (Kvale, 2007). The two surveys with politicians, local decision makers, and journalists (
This study does not analyse the use of social media, which nevertheless is an important feature of the media system in Åland. When this article was ready for publication, a survey conducted by the local statistics agency ÅSUB showed the increasing importance of social media, and not just among young people (ÅSUB, 2020). The survey shows that television is the most important source of information for everyone (78%), followed by social media (72%), and newspapers as number three (71%). The single most important news source was
Having established the aim of the study, the theoretical frame, and the historical, political, and sociocultural context of the study, I now turn to the analysis of the local media system with its population of actors, their interactions, and relation to a wider environment (Nielsen, 2015).
The purpose here is to explore the emergence and characteristics of the media system in Åland, which can be regarded as “institutionally complete” (Moring, 2007) since media is present on all relevant platforms with diverse content. Local media includes two daily newspapers, its own public service and public service offerings from both mainland Finland and neighbouring Sweden, a commercial radio station, and several magazines. Åland is actually the only region in Finland with competition between same-language newspapers, apart from the national evening press (
Åland is a dense media market with around 50 journalists and three major media outlets. In 2019, the legacy newspaper
The death of print newspapers is yet to be seen in Åland, as they still have a strong base of paying readers. According to a study from 2015, around 14,000 households on the islands (70%) were paying to read a printed home-delivered paper in addition to subscribing to papers from Finland or Sweden (Lindén, 2015). Beyond these two newspapers, there is a public service company – Ålands Radio och TV (ÅRTV) founded in 1996 and financed with media fees – as well as a small private radio station, Steel FM.
Audience engagement has become a buzzword among news media during the past few years, and the search for a business model funded by reader revenues. The distance between journalists and their audience has been small, and journalists have been the constant object of attention, including in terms of criticism. As one local (now former) female editor put it in her interview, people are actively seeking interaction:
At some point, I described it as when you go to the grocery store on a Saturday and have to run the gauntlet between the cucumbers and the tomatoes. I am not exaggerating. I cannot go shopping without someone approaching me to talk.
The main reason for the vitality of the media ecosystem is certainly that journalists are attracting paying readers with interesting content. Already from the start,
The media market structure also raises the importance of media ownership and management, something that Hallin and Mancini did not consider (Lund, 2007). Generally, the minority media in Europe is mostly publicly funded, with privately owned and socially owned media being less common (Zabaleta et al., 2014b). Ownership is a factor that can have an impact on editorial decisions and public interest goals such as media plurality (Doyle, 2002). In the case of Åland, both local newspapers have the same dominant owner, the local business tycoon Anders Wiklöf (who also owns the largest company in the market for groceries, Mathias Eriksson). In the case of
In the interview, Anders Wiklöf said he is on a democratic mission: two newspapers contribute to a more vibrant discussion on public affairs – that is, more media means more democracy: “I want people in Åland to have the option of two newspapers; they will be able to have their say”.
The two papers were fierce competitors for many years, and the underdog
Contrary to the previous “King of Åland”, Julius Sundblom, Wiklöf says he has no political ambitions, even though he expresses values close to those espoused by the Social Democrats. At the same time, he airs a certain disdain for the petty side of politics: “Politicians call me on a daily basis and ask me to support this and that. They call me to ask for help, those are the ones tempting me with promises” (quoted in Bruun, 2019: 215). All quotes taken from Bruun (2019), a biography of Wiklöf, have been translated to English by the author.
A local journalist once compared Wiklöf to the Italian media magnate and right-wing populist politician Silvio Berlusconi. Wiklöf responded that in Italy, Berlusconi's face is seen on all television channels: “I asked if someone has seen my face on local television or too often in the newspapers? I asked how often I have called journalists to influence content?” The journalist had to admit that the problem was the other way – it was impossible to reach Wiklöf (Bruun, 2019: 139). In contrast to the Italian media mogul, Wiklöf has not been openly active in politics, and neither can he be blamed for the rise of the right (Statham, 1996), as that part of the political field has very little say on Åland or concern over partisan control of the media and media bias (Durante & Knight, 2012). However, due to Wiklöf's commercial interests in Åland, one can certainly conclude that there is a certain conflict of interest (Hine, 2001).
The non-union association of journalists in Åland has around 50 members, and journalism is highly professionalised with a frequent exchange of reporters from Swedish newsrooms. However, the journalists at the newspapers might have a challenge in balancing their autonomy and professionalism with interests of the owner, and responses to interview questions regarding their relationship with him are vague. Responses range from “Anders Wiklöf is a phenomenon when it comes to newspapers” (female journalist). to “you have to ask Anders about that” (female journalist). Even though known as a stubborn person with strong opinions, Anders Wiklöf said he never intervened in editorial matters: he would not call or send messages to journalists to tell them how to report. Still, he refuses to be a neutral owner and argues strongly against populistic tabloid journalism: “I want them to write positive stuff and an owner has the right to talk about policy,” he said in the interview. Intuitively, he might experience what emerges in research – negative news have more influence on consumer sentiments than positive (Hester & Gibson, 2003), and it makes sense for retailers to prefer primarily positive news. His views also correspond with reader sentiments: international studies show that a majority of news consumers feel that the content offered by news media have the wrong tone (Newman et al., 2019) and some feel that the reporting contains too much “doom and gloom”, and they prefer to get their updates on what is going on in the world from other sources (Toff & Nielsen, 2018).
Media scholars within the field of political economy tend to believe that businesses use all means, such as advertising, to assert control over news directly and through self-censorship (Craig, 2004; Croteau & Hoynes, 2001). In this specific case, the line between news and business might be more imaginary or porous than journalists or the owner want to admit, although not subject to the most blatant forms of special treatment or self-censorship. However, research goes against the idea of Nordic editors and journalists systematically serving owners and business managers (Lund, 2007).
Wiklöf elaborates on the importance of quality journalism:
Every society needs someone who scrutinises power critically. It has to be journalists who do the job […] or someone else if they are not able to handle that mission. If no one keeps a close check on those with power, it ends badly. It ends in corruption, a society that functions worse with more poverty and enormous differences in income.
Wiklöf defends his dominance over media: “Sometimes people challenge my role and say my influence as a large owner in both newspapers is too big. That is rubbish” (quoted in Bruun, 2019: 138). As an owner, Wiklöf intervened when the former management of
This part of the study illustrated the struggle journalists have to go through to maintain their professional independence, but with a strong dominant owner, they need to sometimes take into account his opinions.
The links between media, business, and politics have traditionally been strong in Åland. For more than four decades, the political field was controlled by the founder of In political action, Julius Sundblom was more interested in results than in amiable democratic principles. During one period, he was chairman in the parliament, editor-in-chief for Ålandstidningen and chairman of the Board of Trustees for Bank of Åland [translated]”.
Discontented journalists at
This also points to the normative argument that having newspapers of different political colour is good for democracy and public debate (Napoli, 2009), a view which is also shared by Ålandic politicians in interviews for this article. However, a female social democrat stated that newspapers are also using filters to present their own views, thus becoming actors with their own agency: “For us who are dependent on media to get our message out, this diversity vitalises the debate, even though it is quite easy to predict how the two newspapers react to things”.
As a small society with short distances between actors, journalistic autonomy is not easy to uphold: “You have no problem getting through in the newspapers since they can write about almost anything actually, but [there is no] deep and investigative journalism: I can feel that there is no scrutiny at times.” One reason, says a female politician from the liberal party, is that the distance between journalists and the people they write about is very short, so even if politicians voice strange views, they are polished: “There is an interdependence between journalists and politicians”.
Comparing the two newspapers, there is a certain division of political and historical differences. The survey revealed a general agreement among politicians and local decision-makers that
A female journalist points in her interview to the long tradition of supporting a particular historical view compared with an alternative chronicle of local development:
The survey shows stronger support for the view that
Finally, in addition to political parallelism, we also must take into account the economic bindings. In recent years, the editor-in-chief of
The survey results from 2016 show that local decision-makers are less concerned with what would happen if
In this section, we look at the role of local government in Åland and its media policy with a specific focus on public service media. We have established that Åland has a strong commercial news sector that allows for some media diversity, but public service media's contributions to democracy and community integration are well established (McLeod et al., 1996; Shah et al., 2017). Less known are the specific policies that make these contributions possible, but according to Benson and colleagues (2017), professional autonomy and civic accountability in public media are supported by 1) funding established for multi-year periods; 2) legal charters that restrict partisan government influence; 3) oversight agencies, with arm's length independence from the government in power; and 4) audience councils. The media policy in Åland, adopted by the local government in 2018, seems based on these principles. It states that access to verified information is a cornerstone of society, and the aim is to map what interventions are necessary to promote a reliable and diverse supply of media content – both local production and content from Sweden (Ålands Landskapsregering, 2018). The policy interestingly underlines that public service should “contribute to increased insights and understanding of the foundational principles of the autonomy and preserving Åland's Swedish language and culture” (Ålands Landskapsregering, 2018: 11). So how is public service defined? Looking at the
Some tangible effects of the new policy could soon be observed. In autumn 2019, the parliament decided to transition from public-service funding by licenses to a media fee of EUR 100 per year. In addition, ÅRTV is overseen by a board consisting of experts – not politicians – thus adhering to the arm's length principle.
In preparation for the new media policy, the ruling parties declared that an independent “public service is an important part of the autonomy and the democratic system [and] important in a small society” with a mission to “serve the public with information, knowledge and culture” (Sjögren & Gunell, 2015: 15). This declaration is in line with other mission statements in the Nordic region, where public service combined with commercial news media is an integral part of the welfare state concept (Syvertsen et al., 2014). However, Finland is the only Nordic country in which the government does not provide any direct subsidies for the press, which applies to Åland as well.
Another important feature in the media policy is access to media content from neigh-bouring Sweden, especially produced by the public service provider SVT. In the digital age, copyright issues hinder access to all online content on the SVT web player. When content is geo-blocked because of copyright issues – for instance, sports events for which access is defined in national agreements – it sometimes means that viewers in Åland are trapped between two nations, not able to watch any real-time content.
In preparation for the policy document, the commercial media actors reflected the discourse followed by commercial media in the Nordic countries: they recommended that public service should be restricted to areas where there is no commercial potential. Neither was the response from ÅRTV surprising: “we are present on all platforms where the audience is” and public service media has become “more important” than ever. When the programme was presented by the responsible minister, Mika Nordberg, he noted that people in Åland are “spoiled” when it comes to media diversity, but he underlined that public service, despite that, remains important (Nordberg, 2018).
There is one main research question motivating this study: What are the specific features of the media system in Åland? To answer that question, three sets of data were collected: a series of semi-structured interviews with nine people – the businessperson Anders Wiklöf, three journalists, three politicians, and two amateur historians (2014); a two-part survey with journalists, politicians, and local decision-makers from the municipalities (2016); and the source document of the media policy programme and transcriptions of the political debate that followed after the programme was presented in 2018.
Åland is an example of a region which bears some similarities to other minority areas in Europe, having access to the same-language media as those on the other side of the border – in this case, neighbouring Sweden. Access to Swedish media is one of the core issues, since media supply in Swedish language is limited in Finland. The diversity of the media system in Åland is broad, with local politicians admitting they feel “spoiled” with two economically successful newspapers combined with their own public service media and public service offerings from both Finland and Sweden. Still, it is not possible to neglect the importance of one benevolent business patron for the health of the media system, upholding the newspaper duopoly, and enabling a diversity of opinion. Local policy-makers must reflect on a future without the individual that safeguards the present media situation, Anders Wiklöf. Thus, the existing media diversity is dependent on the goodwill and personal preferences of Anders Wiklöf, which is not acknowledged in the media policy. The study could provide some interesting reading for decision-makers trying to come up with media policies aimed at creating greater diversity of opinion and ideas in their communities.
One theoretical contribution of this article is the inclusion of two new dimensions – geographical and sociocultural context – that are deemed important for understanding the media system. Most accounts of media systems depart from the idea of a nation-state. The media has been an important part of societal development in Åland, and one of the first markers of identity was the inception of the newspaper
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