Commentary: The power of the print media lies not simply in its capacity to attack opponents, but in its unwillingness to grant timely or sufficient right of reply in its Op-Ed pages. Perhaps the greater regulation advocated by Finkelstein would begin to change this. Amid all the restructuring and the rivalry, the opportunity for a more comprehensive review of journalistic regulation, broached by Finkelstein, may well slip away in the cross currents of the Convergence Review, the prospect of new media mergers and acquisitions, precarious federal parliamentary politics, and the turmoil of the broadsheets themselves. Yet it is a debate that we have to have; like our protracted debt crisis, it cannot be postponed indefinitely
A chronicle of events in the Australian news media industry from mid-1997 to mid-1998
Murdoch\u27s Australian papers covered the election with an eye to the likely post-poll climate, wri...
Wendy Bacon of the New Matilda, has more media knowledge than most - but it didn\u27t help when she ...
Commentary: After all the overheated rhetoric over the Finkelstein Report, it may be an anti-climax ...
When Australia’s Independent Media Inquiry headed by ex-judge Ray Finkelstein released its report on...
Robert Manne argues that News Corp’s domination of the press is a threat to Australia’s democracy. ...
This paper identifies two major forces driving change in media policy worldwide: media convergence, ...
This paper identifies two major forces driving change in media policy worldwide: media convergence, ...
When Rupert Murdoch announced in April 2004 that he intended to see his company, News Corporation, r...
The destiny of Australian newspapers and the journalists who work for them came into sharp focus in ...
The modern news media comprise powerful institutions that require the kind of scrutiny they direct t...
Australian discussion of the Leveson Inquiry has started and finished at asking whether ‘we’ suffer ...
JOURNALISM is "under attack " from politicians who must end their attempts to overregulate...
In 2014, Nick Davies, the investigative journalist responsible for uncovering the News of the World ...
By Terry Flew, Queensland University of Technology “Mr Murdoch is entitled to his own view… he own...
A chronicle of events in the Australian news media industry from mid-1997 to mid-1998
Murdoch\u27s Australian papers covered the election with an eye to the likely post-poll climate, wri...
Wendy Bacon of the New Matilda, has more media knowledge than most - but it didn\u27t help when she ...
Commentary: After all the overheated rhetoric over the Finkelstein Report, it may be an anti-climax ...
When Australia’s Independent Media Inquiry headed by ex-judge Ray Finkelstein released its report on...
Robert Manne argues that News Corp’s domination of the press is a threat to Australia’s democracy. ...
This paper identifies two major forces driving change in media policy worldwide: media convergence, ...
This paper identifies two major forces driving change in media policy worldwide: media convergence, ...
When Rupert Murdoch announced in April 2004 that he intended to see his company, News Corporation, r...
The destiny of Australian newspapers and the journalists who work for them came into sharp focus in ...
The modern news media comprise powerful institutions that require the kind of scrutiny they direct t...
Australian discussion of the Leveson Inquiry has started and finished at asking whether ‘we’ suffer ...
JOURNALISM is "under attack " from politicians who must end their attempts to overregulate...
In 2014, Nick Davies, the investigative journalist responsible for uncovering the News of the World ...
By Terry Flew, Queensland University of Technology “Mr Murdoch is entitled to his own view… he own...
A chronicle of events in the Australian news media industry from mid-1997 to mid-1998
Murdoch\u27s Australian papers covered the election with an eye to the likely post-poll climate, wri...
Wendy Bacon of the New Matilda, has more media knowledge than most - but it didn\u27t help when she ...