Aleksandra Krstić is an Assistant Professor at the University of Belgrade – Faculty of Political Science, Department of Journalism and Communication where she gives lectures on TV journalism, Investigative journalism, News editing, Documentary broadcast journalism, EU cultural and media policies at the levels of under-graduate, Master and PhD studies. Her scientific and research interests are journalism and television studies, media ethics, visual communication, media instrumentalization, reporting on democratization conflicts. Her research interests in the migration field are media framing of migrants and visual representation of migration. She has published numerous articles in national and international journals and edited books, including European Journal of Communication, European Journal of Cultural Studies and Media, War and Conflict. She participated in the EU-FP7 funded research project “Media, Conflict and Democratization” (www.mecodem.eu) and other relevant international and national research projects. She has been awarded by the University of Belgrade for the best article published in social science and humanities scientific journals in 2018.

Migration-related publications and conferences

Milojević, A., Malešević, K., Krstić, A. (2018). The framing of migrant crisis in Serbia’s media from 2015 to 2017, Constitutionalism and constitutional design in democratic recession: book of abstracts, Belgrade: The Serbian Political Studies Association

Krstić, A. (2017). “We do it better than you“ – media portrayal of Serbia as a host society for migrants in the Western Balkans route. Conference: Rights and Might: Cultural Counter Narratives of the Migrant and Refugee Experiences, Panel: Media Portrayals of Refugees and Migrants. University of Westminster, London, UK, 22-25 June 2017

Milojević, A., Krstić, A. (2016). The media democratization in Serbia: journalism ethics analyzed through newspaper headlines. In I Vujačić, B. Vranić (Eds.), Decline or eclipse of democracy in Europe’s new democracies. Belgrade: Serbian Political Science Association and the Faculty of Political Science, University of Belgrade, pp. 277-297.