This article explores New Zealand current affairs programmes from a critical political economy perspective. Many critics believe the current affairs television genre is in terminal decline in most Western countries. They argue that current affairs programmes have changed to focus on entertainment and news values with combative, personality-focused programmes, rather than political and serious subject matter. Previous research carried out in New Zealand demonstrated that the news media significantly changed after the election of the fourth Labour government in 1984, which instituted a neo-liberal policy agenda. The result was a more commercially-oriented media environment, which many critics argue, reduced the quality of news and current aff...
This paper interrogates what we believe is an increasingly urgent task: to think about ways of revit...
The research for this thesis started just before the TVNZ Charter was released in 2001. It followed ...
The thesis is a sociological case-study of the two-channel television system in New Zealand from its...
This paper will look at the changing face of current affairs television programmes in New Zealand fr...
This paper will explore the changing face of current affairs programmes in three countries, New Zeal...
“We need the angry buzz of current affairs programmes” (Professor Sylvia Harvey in Holland, 2006, p....
Following the 1989 Broadcasting Act, New Zealand was regarded as indicating the consequences likely ...
A body of scholarship has begun to chart the influence of “chat” modes of news delivery on discourse...
New Zealand television news programming is an area of media research that has been widely explored i...
New Zealand’s state-owned broadcasting has been restructured so many times that former Broadcasting ...
In August 1988, the Labour Government announced its policy to deregulate the broadcasting industry. ...
Examines the state of current affairs television in Australia today by pondering the future, while d...
The paper presented here is intended to provide an overview of some of the themes and issues linking...
At this moment in New Zealand’s history there is a need for healthy political debate on a range of i...
This thesis examines the cultural development of New Zealand state broadcasting and proposes a new i...
This paper interrogates what we believe is an increasingly urgent task: to think about ways of revit...
The research for this thesis started just before the TVNZ Charter was released in 2001. It followed ...
The thesis is a sociological case-study of the two-channel television system in New Zealand from its...
This paper will look at the changing face of current affairs television programmes in New Zealand fr...
This paper will explore the changing face of current affairs programmes in three countries, New Zeal...
“We need the angry buzz of current affairs programmes” (Professor Sylvia Harvey in Holland, 2006, p....
Following the 1989 Broadcasting Act, New Zealand was regarded as indicating the consequences likely ...
A body of scholarship has begun to chart the influence of “chat” modes of news delivery on discourse...
New Zealand television news programming is an area of media research that has been widely explored i...
New Zealand’s state-owned broadcasting has been restructured so many times that former Broadcasting ...
In August 1988, the Labour Government announced its policy to deregulate the broadcasting industry. ...
Examines the state of current affairs television in Australia today by pondering the future, while d...
The paper presented here is intended to provide an overview of some of the themes and issues linking...
At this moment in New Zealand’s history there is a need for healthy political debate on a range of i...
This thesis examines the cultural development of New Zealand state broadcasting and proposes a new i...
This paper interrogates what we believe is an increasingly urgent task: to think about ways of revit...
The research for this thesis started just before the TVNZ Charter was released in 2001. It followed ...
The thesis is a sociological case-study of the two-channel television system in New Zealand from its...