Following its extensive Australian Music on Radio Inquiry conducted between 1982 and 1988, the Australian broadcasting regulator concluded that commercial radio had a responsibility to support the development of Australian music but its own systems for ensuring they fulfilled that responsibility were insufficient. While, as an objective of broadcasting policy, the support for Australian music intersected with the federal government's interest in aiding the development of the local music industry, the government's concurrent interest in deregulating the broadcasting sector impeded the ability of the regulator to address its regulatory deficiencies. In this article I explore how the objective to encourage radio to support the develo...
This article examines the use of Radio Australia by the Australian Government. It examines the exten...
A diverse, independent media is seen as central to a functioning democracy, yet Australia now has on...
In 1992, the then Keating Labor government introduced sweeping changes to the Broadcast Services Act...
In 1989, Triple J became Australia's only national, youth-oriented station when its broadcast area e...
In the mid-2000s, the radio landscape of all Australian mainland capital cities included a station i...
This article surveys the emergence and evolution of the Australian radio system, hybrid system that ...
This study examines the political economy of popular music\ud policy initiatives during 1982-1996, w...
The key aims and objectives behind \u27triple j\u27, a national youth public radio network wit...
Immediate, intimate, portable and inexpensive, radio is the most pervasive medium in Australia. Chan...
In 1932 when the Australian government established the ABC as the national broadcaster, it expected ...
Television and rock'n'roll both arrived in Australia in 1956, twin symbols of modernity and American...
The New Zealand radio market is one of the most deregulated in the world. There are no limits on own...
Rockhampton, Central Queensland, has three major 'players' in the FM radio stakes. These are Triple...
In the 1990s the artistic autonomy of the territorial subsidiaries of the major record companies inc...
This article follows-up a previous study - in the Spring 1995 issue of Convergence 1 - which analyse...
This article examines the use of Radio Australia by the Australian Government. It examines the exten...
A diverse, independent media is seen as central to a functioning democracy, yet Australia now has on...
In 1992, the then Keating Labor government introduced sweeping changes to the Broadcast Services Act...
In 1989, Triple J became Australia's only national, youth-oriented station when its broadcast area e...
In the mid-2000s, the radio landscape of all Australian mainland capital cities included a station i...
This article surveys the emergence and evolution of the Australian radio system, hybrid system that ...
This study examines the political economy of popular music\ud policy initiatives during 1982-1996, w...
The key aims and objectives behind \u27triple j\u27, a national youth public radio network wit...
Immediate, intimate, portable and inexpensive, radio is the most pervasive medium in Australia. Chan...
In 1932 when the Australian government established the ABC as the national broadcaster, it expected ...
Television and rock'n'roll both arrived in Australia in 1956, twin symbols of modernity and American...
The New Zealand radio market is one of the most deregulated in the world. There are no limits on own...
Rockhampton, Central Queensland, has three major 'players' in the FM radio stakes. These are Triple...
In the 1990s the artistic autonomy of the territorial subsidiaries of the major record companies inc...
This article follows-up a previous study - in the Spring 1995 issue of Convergence 1 - which analyse...
This article examines the use of Radio Australia by the Australian Government. It examines the exten...
A diverse, independent media is seen as central to a functioning democracy, yet Australia now has on...
In 1992, the then Keating Labor government introduced sweeping changes to the Broadcast Services Act...