This article considers the discourses of responsibility and blame emerging from newspaper reportage of a crisis in the remote Indigenous community of Aurukun in Northern Queensland, Australia. In doing so, it aims to contribute to the sociology of racism and add to the existing body of scholarship on the ways in which deracialised media discourse can nevertheless be racist. The month of May 2016 saw violence perpetrated by young people against the teachers and principal of the community’s only school. Teachers were evacuated to the regional city of Cairns on 10 May due to violence in the community and fears for their safety. They returned on 18 May, only to be evacuated again on 25 May. These events form the focus of the reportage analysed ...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
Copyright © 2001 Australian Psychological SocietySince the appearance of the Bringing Them Home repo...
Racism and racial discrimination is a common experience for many Indigenous people. Recent Australia...
Race and education: Hidden links between media and Indigenous academic self-concept The aim of this ...
This paper explores the problematic legacy of deculturalisation in the education of Indigenous prima...
Given that there is increasing media and community discussion of minority issues engendered by such ...
In April 2010, an Indian university student was robbed while leaving the campus of his university in...
This paper explores how the colonial hegemony of racism in Australia could be disrupted in schools b...
[Extract] We are very pleased to bring you Volume 45 of The Australian Journal of Indigenous Educati...
We are very pleased to bring you Volume 45 of The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education. At thi...
Submission note: A thesis submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor...
This article develops a critical analysis of the ideological framework that informed the Australian ...
In 2007 the Australian mainstream news media extensively covered a child rape case in the Indigenous...
The ABC recently apologised to staff for racism and cultural insensitivity in its newsrooms. This ca...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
Copyright © 2001 Australian Psychological SocietySince the appearance of the Bringing Them Home repo...
Racism and racial discrimination is a common experience for many Indigenous people. Recent Australia...
Race and education: Hidden links between media and Indigenous academic self-concept The aim of this ...
This paper explores the problematic legacy of deculturalisation in the education of Indigenous prima...
Given that there is increasing media and community discussion of minority issues engendered by such ...
In April 2010, an Indian university student was robbed while leaving the campus of his university in...
This paper explores how the colonial hegemony of racism in Australia could be disrupted in schools b...
[Extract] We are very pleased to bring you Volume 45 of The Australian Journal of Indigenous Educati...
We are very pleased to bring you Volume 45 of The Australian Journal of Indigenous Education. At thi...
Submission note: A thesis submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor...
This article develops a critical analysis of the ideological framework that informed the Australian ...
In 2007 the Australian mainstream news media extensively covered a child rape case in the Indigenous...
The ABC recently apologised to staff for racism and cultural insensitivity in its newsrooms. This ca...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
Copyright © 2001 Australian Psychological SocietySince the appearance of the Bringing Them Home repo...