Commercial radio in Australia was effectively deregulated in the late 1980s, when the statutory regulatory requirements were replaced by industry self-regulation. One of the effects of this deregulation has been a narrowing of the range of programming formats across the industry which has, in turn, dramatically increased the commercial power of the successful radio talkback hosts on the AM band. The eruption of a scandal involving a number of these talkback hosts in 1999 exposed problems in the way that self-regulation had operated. This article outlines what has become a case study of the failure of self-regulation to protect the public interest
Technology has had an important influence on the constitution and participation of the commercial me...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 144-185.Introduction -- Chapter 1. New toys for old friends -...
This article surveys the emergence and evolution of the Australian radio system, hybrid system that ...
This article explores the intersections between Australian party politics and commercial talkback ra...
In 1967, the Post-Master General’s Department (PMG) and the Australian Broadcasting Control Board (A...
In Australia In 1999, a group of conservative and commercially dominant talkback radio hosts – prett...
This article serves as the introduction to this special issue, but it also presents an overview of t...
During 1999 and 2000 considerable attention was focused on an inquiry conducted by the broadcasting ...
In 1992, the then Keating Labor government introduced sweeping changes to the Broadcast Services Act...
Talkback radio in Australia has primarily been conceptualized as a space where populist meta narrati...
This paper presents early results from an ARC-funded research project on the content, audience and i...
This paper explores the relationship between the audience of commercial talkback radio and the actua...
This article examines the first forty years of religious broadcasting on commercial radio in Austral...
Self-regulation programs deter many advertising practices, but there are inherent limitations to its...
A diverse, independent media is seen as central to a functioning democracy, yet Australia now has on...
Technology has had an important influence on the constitution and participation of the commercial me...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 144-185.Introduction -- Chapter 1. New toys for old friends -...
This article surveys the emergence and evolution of the Australian radio system, hybrid system that ...
This article explores the intersections between Australian party politics and commercial talkback ra...
In 1967, the Post-Master General’s Department (PMG) and the Australian Broadcasting Control Board (A...
In Australia In 1999, a group of conservative and commercially dominant talkback radio hosts – prett...
This article serves as the introduction to this special issue, but it also presents an overview of t...
During 1999 and 2000 considerable attention was focused on an inquiry conducted by the broadcasting ...
In 1992, the then Keating Labor government introduced sweeping changes to the Broadcast Services Act...
Talkback radio in Australia has primarily been conceptualized as a space where populist meta narrati...
This paper presents early results from an ARC-funded research project on the content, audience and i...
This paper explores the relationship between the audience of commercial talkback radio and the actua...
This article examines the first forty years of religious broadcasting on commercial radio in Austral...
Self-regulation programs deter many advertising practices, but there are inherent limitations to its...
A diverse, independent media is seen as central to a functioning democracy, yet Australia now has on...
Technology has had an important influence on the constitution and participation of the commercial me...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 144-185.Introduction -- Chapter 1. New toys for old friends -...
This article surveys the emergence and evolution of the Australian radio system, hybrid system that ...