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EN
The author describes EU Bookshop website - an information portal managed by the Office for Official Publications of European Communities. This portal offers a direct access to the publications issued by the institutions, agencies and other bodies of the European Union. It serves as an online bookshop, catalog and archive of the European Union publications. EU Bookshop offers its users a possibility of searching the EU publications, ordering their printed versions and acquiring free electronic versions in various European languages.
EN
The article is a review of member states’ information policy on the European Union. It analyses situations when information activities are conducted with increasing intensity. It examines information campaigns before the European Union referendums, awareness campaigns relating to euro changeover and to the European Parliament elections. It also analyses information strategies relating to the presidency of the Council of the European Union and information activities carried out according to the European Commission regulation on the structural funds. The findings of this research proves that member states’ information policy cannot be described in one template. It depends on a level of government involvement and the objectivity of conveyed information, on relations with the European Commission and on conformity with European Union interests.
EN
Eurobarometer surveys provide the European Commission with information on public attitude and reaction on EU activities. They are a tool of great importance for the EU information policy. The case study described in this article focuses on information problems related to the European Parliament elections. The article focuses on 5 topics: awareness of the European Parliament and European elections, turnout, profiles of voters and non-voters and evaluation of information campaigns. Recommendations of Eurobarometer researchers point out weak points of past campaigns and suggest future improvements although data analysis leads to conclusions that information activities aiming at encouraging voters to attend elections are a kind of “mission: impossible”. Rather by any failure in information activities, this is caused by the power and importance of the European Parliament in EU institutional structure.
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