Severe contractions in the Australian media landscape have led to a loss of jobs in major metropolitan newsrooms. In 2015, those cuts spread significantly to regional and rural newsrooms in Australia. This paper explores the effect of job loss on rural and regional journalism through a survey of 31 journalists working at rural and regional media organisations whose positions were made redundant from 2012 to 2015. As well as providing accounts of their own personal redundancy experiences, this paper explores the participants’ opinions of regional and rural journalism. It concludes that those whose positions in local journalism have become redundant are concerned about the resources of local newsrooms, and the quality of journalism these news...
This article argues that big media in Australia promote three myths about rural and regional news in...
One of the characteristics most widely associated with non-metropolitan news media is a relatively c...
Studies of journalists’ professional views have a long history in many countries around the globe. T...
Rural/regional news is emerging as a vital area of media policy and research throughout the world as...
In Australia and beyond, journalism is reportedly an industry in crisis, a crisis exacerbated by CO...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
As the primary mechanism through which journalistic labour is organized within a newsroom, news beat...
Anecdotal evidence suggests Australian journalism is changing. This study borrows from earlier studi...
Residents of the remote central-western Queensland town of Blackall (pop. 1,833) watched their last ...
This article reports on job loss among Canadian journalists between 2012 and 2016. Building on Austr...
This article examines how a local newspaper’s closure impacts the way everyday people in a rural Aus...
There is an industrial revolution taking place in the media sphere, and it is a result of digitalisa...
While considerable academic attention has been paid to the effect of industry turbulence on journali...
Zion, L., Marjoribanks, T., & O’Donnell, P. (2022). Who is a journalist now? Recognising atypical jo...
The New Beats report describes the study undertaken with 225 participants in 2014 from an estimated ...
This article argues that big media in Australia promote three myths about rural and regional news in...
One of the characteristics most widely associated with non-metropolitan news media is a relatively c...
Studies of journalists’ professional views have a long history in many countries around the globe. T...
Rural/regional news is emerging as a vital area of media policy and research throughout the world as...
In Australia and beyond, journalism is reportedly an industry in crisis, a crisis exacerbated by CO...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
As the primary mechanism through which journalistic labour is organized within a newsroom, news beat...
Anecdotal evidence suggests Australian journalism is changing. This study borrows from earlier studi...
Residents of the remote central-western Queensland town of Blackall (pop. 1,833) watched their last ...
This article reports on job loss among Canadian journalists between 2012 and 2016. Building on Austr...
This article examines how a local newspaper’s closure impacts the way everyday people in a rural Aus...
There is an industrial revolution taking place in the media sphere, and it is a result of digitalisa...
While considerable academic attention has been paid to the effect of industry turbulence on journali...
Zion, L., Marjoribanks, T., & O’Donnell, P. (2022). Who is a journalist now? Recognising atypical jo...
The New Beats report describes the study undertaken with 225 participants in 2014 from an estimated ...
This article argues that big media in Australia promote three myths about rural and regional news in...
One of the characteristics most widely associated with non-metropolitan news media is a relatively c...
Studies of journalists’ professional views have a long history in many countries around the globe. T...