Research has shown news media in post-colonial societies such as Aotearoa New Zealand naturalise the colonising processes by which settler values and social organisation were imposed and the resulting marginalised status of the indigenous peoples. We explore these processes in news reports that claimed Māori wanted to charge for airspace over Lake Taupo. Studying headlines, the originating newspaper article, and subsequent television reports, we show how Māori were constructed as threatening the ability of ‘New Zealanders’ to enjoy the lake. That threat was constructed as imminent although the accounts included no direct evidence or identified source for the reported demand. We consider the one-sided coverage inaccurate, unbalanced and unfa...
For more than two decades, diversity has been a growing mantra for the New Zealand news media. Initi...
As a public medium and a vehicle of "culture", which frames and comprehends social priorities, relat...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...
This article explores the social significance of increased media production by Maori in Aotearoa/New...
This article reports on a content analysis of newspaper items from Aotearoa/New Zealand about Māori ...
(c) The Author/s 2022AM accepted for publication in "Media, culture and society" first published onl...
The Māori Television Service (MTS) is described as New Zealand's Indigenous broadcaster. Since its l...
This paper explores the interpretative resources which news and features journalists in Aotearoa Ne...
ENNY RANKINE, ANGELA MOEWAKA BARNES, BELINDA BORELL, TIMOTHY McCREANOR, RAYMOND NAIRN and AMANDA GRE...
This article uses critical discourse analysis to investigate audience criticism of the news media's ...
Negative mass media representations of Māori are of major concern, impacting on Māori/Pakeha relatio...
One of New Zealand’s leading daily newspapers, The Dominion Post, greeted its readers on 20 May...
By looking at how Pacific media producers position themselves in different contexts, this paper iden...
In recent years, a number of indigenous activists have gained celebrity status in ways that carry in...
Aotearoa/New Zealand has the largest Polynesian population in Oceania. Three Pacific microstates now...
For more than two decades, diversity has been a growing mantra for the New Zealand news media. Initi...
As a public medium and a vehicle of "culture", which frames and comprehends social priorities, relat...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...
This article explores the social significance of increased media production by Maori in Aotearoa/New...
This article reports on a content analysis of newspaper items from Aotearoa/New Zealand about Māori ...
(c) The Author/s 2022AM accepted for publication in "Media, culture and society" first published onl...
The Māori Television Service (MTS) is described as New Zealand's Indigenous broadcaster. Since its l...
This paper explores the interpretative resources which news and features journalists in Aotearoa Ne...
ENNY RANKINE, ANGELA MOEWAKA BARNES, BELINDA BORELL, TIMOTHY McCREANOR, RAYMOND NAIRN and AMANDA GRE...
This article uses critical discourse analysis to investigate audience criticism of the news media's ...
Negative mass media representations of Māori are of major concern, impacting on Māori/Pakeha relatio...
One of New Zealand’s leading daily newspapers, The Dominion Post, greeted its readers on 20 May...
By looking at how Pacific media producers position themselves in different contexts, this paper iden...
In recent years, a number of indigenous activists have gained celebrity status in ways that carry in...
Aotearoa/New Zealand has the largest Polynesian population in Oceania. Three Pacific microstates now...
For more than two decades, diversity has been a growing mantra for the New Zealand news media. Initi...
As a public medium and a vehicle of "culture", which frames and comprehends social priorities, relat...
Journalism has played—and continues to play— a crucial role in 'imagining' indigenous people and the...