For a demise that has been predicted for over 60 years, radio is a remarkably resilient communications medium, and one that warrants deeper examination as a vehicle for the revitalization of historically marginalized and Indigenous languages. Radio has not been eroded by the rise of new media, whether that be television, video, or newer multimodal technologies associated with the internet. To the contrary, communities are leveraging the formerly analogue medium of radio in transformative ways, breathing new life into old transistors, and using radio for the transmission of stories, song, and conversation. In this contribution, we highlight effective and imaginative uses of radio for Indigenous language reclamation through a series of case s...
Navajo language electronic conferences for students at Diné College’s Kneel Down Bread conference fo...
"This thesis examines the use of modem communication technology by the Warlpiri over this sixteen ye...
1111111 The proofs that messages are beller understood and that the audience derived good feeling of...
For a demise that has been predicted for over 60 years, radio is a remarkably resilient communicatio...
The re-introduction of an Indigenous language into an English-speaking community presents an enormou...
In this article, I discuss Indigenous radio’s ongoing importance for tribal communities in the US fr...
[Extract] Radio forms the largest part of the Indigenous media sector. As relatively accessible and ...
Sustainable livelihood means to live with the close harmony without losing ecosystem both in economi...
Indigenous peoples in the United States experience some of the most severe health inequities out of ...
This article offers a critical review of Brazil’s Indigenous language broadcasting landscape, from t...
In the first decade of the twenty-first century, a number of Indigenous radio stations around Austra...
Radio is the most widespread electronic medium in the world today. As a form of technology that is b...
In the age of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), the traditional mass medialikeradio...
Using the electronic colonialism theory and globalisation approach, the study reflects on the distin...
In the face of settler colonial expansion, contemporary environmental change, and contradictory revi...
Navajo language electronic conferences for students at Diné College’s Kneel Down Bread conference fo...
"This thesis examines the use of modem communication technology by the Warlpiri over this sixteen ye...
1111111 The proofs that messages are beller understood and that the audience derived good feeling of...
For a demise that has been predicted for over 60 years, radio is a remarkably resilient communicatio...
The re-introduction of an Indigenous language into an English-speaking community presents an enormou...
In this article, I discuss Indigenous radio’s ongoing importance for tribal communities in the US fr...
[Extract] Radio forms the largest part of the Indigenous media sector. As relatively accessible and ...
Sustainable livelihood means to live with the close harmony without losing ecosystem both in economi...
Indigenous peoples in the United States experience some of the most severe health inequities out of ...
This article offers a critical review of Brazil’s Indigenous language broadcasting landscape, from t...
In the first decade of the twenty-first century, a number of Indigenous radio stations around Austra...
Radio is the most widespread electronic medium in the world today. As a form of technology that is b...
In the age of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), the traditional mass medialikeradio...
Using the electronic colonialism theory and globalisation approach, the study reflects on the distin...
In the face of settler colonial expansion, contemporary environmental change, and contradictory revi...
Navajo language electronic conferences for students at Diné College’s Kneel Down Bread conference fo...
"This thesis examines the use of modem communication technology by the Warlpiri over this sixteen ye...
1111111 The proofs that messages are beller understood and that the audience derived good feeling of...