The Tongan Constitution guarantees free speech and media freedom but this guarantee has often been misunderstood and misinterpreted by the media industry, the government and politicians alike. Freedom of speech was integrated into the Constitution from the beginning in 1875. However, as history has shown, this freedom has often been altered to silence opposition and critics’ voices. As early as 1882, the Tongan media had their first confrontation with the government and in 2003 saw a parallel incident unfolding. This article examines the influence of state control on the media in Tonga through an analysis of two case studies from different eras in Tongan history: the Niuvakai newspaper in 1882 and the Taimi ‘o Tonga news...
On 10 April 2009, a military backed regime wrested total control of the Fiji Islands in what was arg...
This article examines the cultural, political, ethnic and economic forces that have shaped the evol...
When Papua New Guinea's Constitutional Review Comission first mooted possible legislation against pr...
This thesis is a study of the media in Tonga and it looks at its history and contemporary role in th...
Constitutional guarantees of free speech and media freedom are well established 'on paper' in most S...
PNG's Melanesian societies with Polyneasian societies like Tonga and Samoa, which evolved the famili...
Free speech Constitutional guarantees of free speech and media freedom are well established ‘on pape...
This article examines the domestic and regional impact of a punitive media law introduced in Fiji in...
This article examines the domestic and regional impact of a punitive media law introduced in Fiji in...
South Pacific university-based journalism school publications were innovative newspaper publishers f...
South Pacific university-based journalism school publications were innovative newspaper publishers f...
The news media in Oceania are small but remarkably diverse and vigorous. Ownership ranges from large...
Commentary: Media freedom is not absolute, which is why we also accept that laws must be instit...
The issue of political reform has been widely debated in Tonga, as calls for a modern democracy cont...
Do journalists need to make a stand? As tellers of the truth and watchdogs, do those in the news med...
On 10 April 2009, a military backed regime wrested total control of the Fiji Islands in what was arg...
This article examines the cultural, political, ethnic and economic forces that have shaped the evol...
When Papua New Guinea's Constitutional Review Comission first mooted possible legislation against pr...
This thesis is a study of the media in Tonga and it looks at its history and contemporary role in th...
Constitutional guarantees of free speech and media freedom are well established 'on paper' in most S...
PNG's Melanesian societies with Polyneasian societies like Tonga and Samoa, which evolved the famili...
Free speech Constitutional guarantees of free speech and media freedom are well established ‘on pape...
This article examines the domestic and regional impact of a punitive media law introduced in Fiji in...
This article examines the domestic and regional impact of a punitive media law introduced in Fiji in...
South Pacific university-based journalism school publications were innovative newspaper publishers f...
South Pacific university-based journalism school publications were innovative newspaper publishers f...
The news media in Oceania are small but remarkably diverse and vigorous. Ownership ranges from large...
Commentary: Media freedom is not absolute, which is why we also accept that laws must be instit...
The issue of political reform has been widely debated in Tonga, as calls for a modern democracy cont...
Do journalists need to make a stand? As tellers of the truth and watchdogs, do those in the news med...
On 10 April 2009, a military backed regime wrested total control of the Fiji Islands in what was arg...
This article examines the cultural, political, ethnic and economic forces that have shaped the evol...
When Papua New Guinea's Constitutional Review Comission first mooted possible legislation against pr...