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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 09:20

Insights on the Effective Communication of Climate Change Messages

Politics | Crisis Communication | ANZCA 2023 |

The final speaker in this ANZCA 2023 session is Kirsty O’Callaghan, whose interest is in the role of gender in effective climate change communication. The important role of women at the heart of climate action has long been recognised, but climate change communication must also be multi-dimensional and involve a diversity of voices – Greta Thunberg’s success in her climate advocacy demonstrates this.

However, there still is a lack of women visible in such debates, especially also in the context of Australia and Aotearoa. Does climate change communication only work with particular audiences under specific circumstances, and what is the …

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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 08:55

From Bothsidesism on the Existence of Climate Change to Bothsidesism on the Adequacy of Government Action on Climate Change in Australia

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Crisis Communication | ANZCA 2023 |

The next speaker in this ANZCA 2023 session is Victoria Fielding, whose interest is in reporting roles in climate disasters in Australia. Her focus is on the catastrophic bushfires in 2019/20, and the Lismore floods in 2022, and the way the media did or did not link these to climate change. These natural disasters were extreme, and part of a greater trend towards growing threats from climate change, and as such became part of a highly politicised debate around climate change in Australia.

While there can no longer be any question about the reality of catastrophic climate change, consensus about …

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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 08:27

Mainstream and Social Media Framing in the Great Barrier Reef Debate in Australia

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | Social Media Network Mapping | Twitter | Streaming Media | Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate (ARC Laureate Fellowship) | ANZCA 2023 |

The next session that I’m in at at ANZCA 2023 is on media and climate change, and starts with my QUT Digital Media Research Centre colleague Carly Lubicz-Zaorski, whose focus is on the mainstream media framing of UNESCO’s ‘in danger’ rating for the Great Barrier Reef on the Australian northeast coast.

Mainstream media continue to play a key agenda-setting role on social media platforms, but the way this works differs across social media platforms. Carly collected data from several social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube) around the UNESCO ‘in danger’ recommendation in 2021. The recommendation was eventually ignored by the …

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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 07:34

The Pseudo-Legal Language of ‘Sovereign Citizen’ Court Cases in Aotearoa and Australia

Politics | Government | ‘Fake News’ | ANZCA 2023 |

And the final paper in this ANZCA 2023 session is by Petra Theunissen, whose focus is on the ‘Sovereign Citizen’ movement in Aotearoa and Australia. This is a non-prosocial activist movement, which believes in the illegitimacy of government institutions and sees itself as subject to laws only as they interpret and consent to them. This morphed from a far-right, white supremacist posse comitatus into a broader movement that now overlaps (but is not the same as) other movements including anti-vaxxers, conspiracists, and other groups.

The key beliefs of this movement are that governments are corrupt and extract taxes illegally, in …

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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 06:57

Comparing the ‘Freedom’ Movement Rhetoric in Aotearoa and Australia during COVID-19

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | ANZCA 2023 |

The next speakers in this ANZCA 2023 session are Claire Fitzpatrick and Ashleigh Haw, who extend our focus to a comparative analysis of the ‘freedom’ movements in Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia. In Aotearoa, the protest was organised by a diverse group of participants without clear leadership, and the atmosphere around the protest declined precipitously as prosocial and family-oriented protests were overwhelmed by some much darker messages calling for the overthrow of the democratically elected government.

This led to increasing radicalisation and violence; the protest became a battleground of warring narratives and bodies. This also formed a part of, and …

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Snurb — Friday 24 November 2023 06:26

Revisiting the ‘Convoy to Canberra’ as an Afectively Polarised Populist Event

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | Streaming Media | ANZCA 2023 |

The last day at ANZCA 2023 starts for me with a session on ‘freedom’ movements, and we begin with Ciaran Ryan and a paper on the 2022 ‘Convoy to Canberra’. This was a gathering of some 10,000 Australians in Canberra in early February 2022 to protest COVID-19 measures, and was inspired to some extent by the Canadian ‘Freedom Convoy’ to Ottawa, which blocked the city centre. Both convoys were largely organised and promoted through social media.

These events exemplify the use of such media for the organisation of populist protest movements, supported and inflamed by fringe news outlets and enhanced …

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Snurb — Thursday 23 November 2023 11:42

Re-Grounding Communication Studies

ANZCA 2023 |

The next speaker in this ANZCA 2023 session is Cathy Greenfield, whose interest is in communication studies’ contribution to ‘talking country’ at a time of global crisis. This must necessarily proceed through cross-cultural engagement between First Nations and non-Indigenous people, and is especially important in the context of enduring and renewed struggles for Indigenous sovereignty.

The present project was prompted especially by the development of a mobile walking tour app called Land of Birds in collaboration with the Dja Dja Wurrung people northwest of Melbourne, which would provide access to selected locally relevant stories as users explored the countryside and …

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Snurb — Thursday 23 November 2023 11:09

Measuring News Diversity on Facebook in Australia

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | ANZCA 2023 |

The next speaker in this ANZCA 2023 session is Cameron McTernan, who is interested in news diversity on social media. Media diversity has long been an issue and a priority in media policy, but has often focussed on media ownership and media content at the outlet level, without necessarily taking into account the role of social media in the distribution of content. This is becoming increasingly important because media supply chains are becoming less linear as social media logics and algorithms affect news distribution.

There is a distinction arising between direct access (through the original sources) and distributed access (as …

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Snurb — Thursday 23 November 2023 10:42

How Australian Newsrooms Continue to Do Harm to Indigenous Journalists

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ANZCA 2023 |

The next session at ANZCA 2023 starts with David Nolan, who introduces the idea of ‘racial reckoning’ as both amplified by as well as directed at media; this highlights the failures of racial inequality and is being performed through the ‘diagnostic’ of digital media, which provide a space for critiques of conventional media. Such reckoning has often been addressed, in Australian, by the hiring of Indigenous journalists.

David and team approached this through a series of interviews with practicing Indigenous journalists on the Australian east coast, exploring their own experiences and positionality. This also highlights the embedded knowledge of First …

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Snurb — Thursday 23 November 2023 09:07

Towards a More Ethical Framework for Journalistic Death Knocks

Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ANZCA 2023 |

The second speaker in this ANZCA 2023 is Alysson Watson, whose focus is on the journalistic ‘death knock’: the way journalists approach families who have lost someone in newsworthy circumstances. This is obviously difficult, given the circumstances; it has moved from a literal knock on the door to the use of other technologies, including now especially also social media technologies.

How and why do Australian journalists use such digital death knocks? Alysson conducted a survey of some 100 journalists with extensive experience of death knocks, and interviewed 10 of them. The journalistic field is a microcosm with its own rules …

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Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

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Untangling the Furball: A Practice Mapping Approach to the Analysis of Multimodal Interactions in Social Networks (Social Media + Society)

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Inside the Moral Panic at Australia's 'First of Its Kind' Summit about Kids on Social Media (Crikey)

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Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

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Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

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