Logo image
Ethnic diversity in television news: an Australian case study
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Ethnic diversity in television news: an Australian case study

G. Phillips and S. Tapsall
Australian Journalism Review, Vol.29(2), pp.15-33
2007
pdf
ethnic_diversity.pdfDownloadView
Published (Version of Record) Open Access

Abstract

It is at times of stress that the media come under particular scrutiny amid fears that they have the capacity to make a bad situation worse. Over time, this has led researchers to focus on the treatment of racial minorities, women, "deviant" groups and terrorism. Since 9/11 and the War on Terror, a major focus of such research has been on the portrayal of Islam and Muslim communities. These studies have shown that the modern business of media and the processes and practices of journalism in the digital age impact on the nature of reportage in ways that can often disadvantage minority groups. The following analysis examines Australia’s television news services in order to explore if and how the representation of ethnic minority groups differs from the representation of the "Anglo" majority. Examining both the quantity and the quality of television news content over a two-week period, the study not only looks at what was reported, but also how it was reported. In this way, it attempts to show how the characteristics of the medium impact on the nature of the portrayal of people from diverse ethnic backgrounds. The dominant representations of ethnic minorities as "mad", "bad", "sad" or "other" sends a subtle but unmistakable message to the viewer about who is "them" and who is "us" in the wider Australian community.

Details

Metrics

702 File views/ downloads
100 Record Views
Logo image