This chapter sets out to analyse the convergence of powerful competing interests underpinning the communication and media systems of the British Empire, and to unravel the implications of this unprecedented development for the Dominions and Australia in particular. As will be shown, the growing complexity of the imperial news system between the wars ensured that the newspaper press in Britain and the Dominions was more than a disinterested spectator in covering these cable and wireless rivalries. In reporting the complex developments associated with the merger of cable and wireless, the Australian press played several distinct roles, acting firstly as a conduit for British official sources; secondly, as a concerted lobby with collective inf...
This paper provides an assessment of the role of Australian newspaper proprietors, most notably, Sir...
This article examines this alternate model of overseas broadcasting and its interaction with the BBC...
Speaking in Melbourne at the opening of the 1925 Imperial Press Conference, the second Lord Burnham ...
The extraordinary success of the commercial beam wireless services between Britain and its Dominions...
The Commonwealth Communications Council met for the first time at Halifax House in The Strand in Ap...
This paper aims to identify and analyse, in the first instance, those key developments that contribu...
This paper aims to identify and analyse, in the first instance, those key developments that contribu...
The article examines the protracted commitment of the Commonwealth Press Union (formerlythe Empire P...
In July 1931, a year-and-a-half before the BBC opened its Empire broadcasting service, Amalgamated W...
The article provides an overview of the post-war contexts in which the Empire Press Union became the...
This article will examine the involvement of the Empire Press Union, including prominent early membe...
This article will examine the involvement of the Empire Press Union, including prominent early membe...
Filling in a key chapter in communications history, Dwayne R. Winseck and Robert M. Pike offer an in...
This paper provides an assessment of the role of Australian newspaper proprietors, most notably, Sir...
The trans-Pacific communication and press networks established during the war had permanently fractu...
This paper provides an assessment of the role of Australian newspaper proprietors, most notably, Sir...
This article examines this alternate model of overseas broadcasting and its interaction with the BBC...
Speaking in Melbourne at the opening of the 1925 Imperial Press Conference, the second Lord Burnham ...
The extraordinary success of the commercial beam wireless services between Britain and its Dominions...
The Commonwealth Communications Council met for the first time at Halifax House in The Strand in Ap...
This paper aims to identify and analyse, in the first instance, those key developments that contribu...
This paper aims to identify and analyse, in the first instance, those key developments that contribu...
The article examines the protracted commitment of the Commonwealth Press Union (formerlythe Empire P...
In July 1931, a year-and-a-half before the BBC opened its Empire broadcasting service, Amalgamated W...
The article provides an overview of the post-war contexts in which the Empire Press Union became the...
This article will examine the involvement of the Empire Press Union, including prominent early membe...
This article will examine the involvement of the Empire Press Union, including prominent early membe...
Filling in a key chapter in communications history, Dwayne R. Winseck and Robert M. Pike offer an in...
This paper provides an assessment of the role of Australian newspaper proprietors, most notably, Sir...
The trans-Pacific communication and press networks established during the war had permanently fractu...
This paper provides an assessment of the role of Australian newspaper proprietors, most notably, Sir...
This article examines this alternate model of overseas broadcasting and its interaction with the BBC...
Speaking in Melbourne at the opening of the 1925 Imperial Press Conference, the second Lord Burnham ...