This book analyses the new structure of democratic public discourse and reinterprets the
meaning of media freedom. It discusses the development of European electronic media regulation
in a historical and regulatory perspective and presents how the new digital regulation has
organically developed on its grounds. The new digital regulation is introduced primarily from
the perspective of how it contributes to establishing a new media order. This
interdisciplinary discussion intersects law media science and political studies and addresses
readers interested in the development of new media democracy or technology regulation. The
author's research focuses on media freedom and media regulation with a particular interest in
new technologies.