ORCID Profile
0000-0002-7056-2928
Current Organisations
University of South Australia
,
University of Technology Sydney
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Publisher: IEEE
Date: 30-11-2022
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 25-05-2021
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Date: 09-10-2018
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Date: 2021
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Date: 2019
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 20-01-2023
Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Date: 2019
Publisher: IEEE
Date: 18-07-2022
Publisher: MDPI AG
Date: 13-02-2021
Abstract: In Australia, as in other multicultural countries, the global Islamophobic discourse linking Muslims to terrorists to refugees results in the belief of an “enemy within”, which fractures the public sphere. Muslim minorities learn to distrust mainstream media as the global discourse manifests in localised right-wing discussion. This fracturing was further compounded in 2020 with increased media concentration and polarisation. In response, 12 young Australian Muslim women opened themselves up to four journalists working for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). They engaged in critical journalism research called Frame Reflection Interviews (FRIs). The process gave journalists important knowledge around the power dynamics of Islamophobia and empowered participants to help shape new media discourses tackling Islamophobia. This paper proposes that the FRIs are one method to rebuild trust in journalism while redistributing risk towards the journalists. These steps are necessary to build a normatively cosmopolitan global public sphere capable of breaking the discursive link between refugees and terrorism and fighting back against the rise of the far right.
Publisher: IEEE
Date: 27-09-2021
Publisher: Oxford University PressNew York
Date: 11-06-2022
DOI: 10.1093/OSO/9780197565797.001.0001
Abstract: This book tackles the sociohistorical, political, and practical aspects of one of journalism’s hardest and most necessary tasks: communicating the reality of today’s borderlands. In an era marked by an unprecedented refugee crisis and ongoing, seemingly unending, borderland conflicts, foreign correspondents could play a pivotal role in helping create a global public sphere that incorporates the perspectives of those who are most effected by ongoing resource-fueled wars—and least powerful. However, aspects of the historical development of foreign correspondence, as well as contemporary practices, do not allow the profession to reach this potential. Borderland takes insights from postcolonial studies, international relations, development studies, and philosophy and uses the site of the world’s largest UN peacekeeping presence, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as its case study. It examines the specific narrative styles, and news-gathering habits in these complex spaces and discovers neocolonial practices stymying ethical praxis. Brought to life through the autoethnographic descriptions and analysis of ‘behind the scenes’ events, Borderland seeks to introduce new, decolonized reporting techniques. And it argues for reporting that explores how local realities are impacted by global discourses. In a digital world where people access news direct from conflict zones, the role and value of foreign correspondents must be questioned. Borderland answers that question by proposing decolonized foundations from which foreign correspondents can be the storytellers needed in today’s global polity.
Publisher: Intellect
Date: 11-2020
DOI: 10.1386/AJR_00048_5
Abstract: Review of: Media and the Politics of Offence , Anne Graefer (ed.) (2019) Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 258 pp., ISBN 978-3-030-17573-3, p/bk, €24.99 ISBN 978-3-030-17574-0, ebk, €21.39
No related grants have been discovered for Chrisanthi Giotis.