scholarly journals The Christchurch mosque shooting, the media, and subsequent gun control reform in New Zealand: a descriptive analysis

Author(s):  
S. Every-Palmer ◽  
R. Cunningham ◽  
M. Jenkins ◽  
E. Bell
Author(s):  
Liana MacDonald ◽  
Adreanne Ormond

Racism in the Aotearoa New Zealand media is the subject of scholarly debate that examines how Māori (Indigenous Peoples of New Zealand) are broadcast in a negative and demeaning light. Literature demonstrates evolving understandings of how the industry places Pākehā (New Zealanders primarily of European descent) interests at the heart of broadcasting. We offer new insights by arguing that the media industry propagates a racial discourse of silencing that sustains widespread ignorance of the ways that Pākehā sensibilities mediate society. We draw attention to a silencing discourse through one televised story in 2018. On-screen interactions reproduce and safeguard a harmonious narrative of settler–Indigenous relations that support ignorance and denial of the structuring force of colonisation, and the Television Code of Broadcasting Practice upholds colour-blind perceptions of discrimination and injustice through liberal rhetoric. These processes ensure that the media industry is complicit in racism and the ongoing oppression of Indigenous peoples.


Author(s):  
AL Palmer ◽  
CW Rogers ◽  
KJ Stafford ◽  
A Gal ◽  
CF Bolwell

2011 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Jean Kenix

Two recent child abuse cases in New Zealand flooded the local media spotlight and captured the public's attention. In both cases, the mothers were not charged with murdering their children. Yet both mothers received extensive scrutiny in the media. This qualitative analysis found two central narratives in media content: that of the traitor and that of the hedonist. In drawing upon such archetypal mythologies surrounding motherhood, the media constructed these women as simplistic deviants who did not possess the qualities of a ‘real’ mother. These framing techniques served to divert scrutiny away from civil society and exonerated social institutions of any potential wrongdoing, while also reaffirming a persistent mythology that remains damaging to women.


Book Reviews: Women and Politics in New Zealand, Voters' Vengeance: The 1990 Election in New Zealand and the Fate of the Fourth Labour Government, The Domestic Bases of Grand Strategy, The Politics of the Training Market: From Manpower Services Commission to Training and Enterprise Councils, Public Policy and the Nature of the New Right, Managing the United Kingdom: An Introduction to its Political Economy and Public Policy, Citizenship and Employment: Investigating Post-Industrial Options, Government by the Market? The Politics of Public Choice, Responsive Regulation: Transcending the Deregulation Debate, Regulatory Politics in Transition, The Politics of Regulation: A Comparative Perspective, Brother Number One: A Political Biography of Pol Pot, The Tragedy of Cambodian History: Politics, War and Revolution since 1945, Welfare States and Working Mothers, Protecting Soldiers and Mothers: The Political Origins of Social Policy in the United States, Japan and the United States: Global Dimensions of Economic Power, Political Dynamics in Contemporary Japan, Japan's Foreign Policy after the Cold War: Coping with Change, Soviet Studies Guide, Directory of Russian MPs, Mikhail Gorbachev and the End of Soviet Power, Red Sunset: The Failure of Soviet Politics, Six Years that Shook the World: Perestroika — The Impossible Project, The Politics of Transition: Shaping a Post-Soviet Future, Democracy and Decision: The Pure Theory of Electoral Preference, Probabilistic Voting Theory, Contested Closets: The Politics and Ethics of Outing, Queer in America: Sex, the Media, and the Closets of Power

1994 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 717-730
Author(s):  
Preston King ◽  
Marco Cesa ◽  
Martin Rhodes ◽  
Stephen Wilks ◽  
Christopher Tremewan ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Ervan Johan Wicaksana ◽  
Pramana Atmadja

Penggunaan video pembelajaran sebagai media pembelajaran diharapkan dapat membantu siswa dalam memahami materi, khususnya daur ulang limbah plastik. Penelitian ini dilakukan di SMA Negeri 6 Kota Jambi pada bulan Mei 2019. Jenis penelitian ini adalah penelitian analisis deskriptif dengan metode kuantitatif. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk melihat persepsi guru dan persepsi siswa dalam mengimplementasikan video pembelajaran biologi pada materi daur ulang limbah plastik menggunakan sparkol videoscribe. Data penelitian diperoleh dengan cara menyebar angket kepada siswa dan guru. Selanjutnya uji coba produk dilakukan pada 6 orang kelompok kecil, 26 orang siswa kelompok besar dan satu guru mata pelajaran biologi, sebelumnya dilakukan validasi media oleh ahli materi dan ahli media. Hasil validasi oleh ahli materi dengan persentase 81,25% dengan kategori “Sangat Baik” sedangan hasil validasi ahli media 93,75% dengan kategori “Sangat Baik”. Pada uji coba kelompok kecil memperoleh tanggapan 92,5% dengan kategori “sangat baik” sedangkan pada uji coba kelompok besar memperoleh tanggapan 87,2%. Persepsi guru bidang studi biologi memperoleh tanggapan 87,5% dengan kategori “sangat baik“ berdasarkan hal tersebut media layak digunakan. Kata Kunci: daur ulang limbah plastik, sparkol videoscribe, video pembelajaran The use of instructional videos as learning media is expected to help students understand the material, especially recycling plastic waste. This research was conducted at the 6th High School of Jambi City in May 2019. This type of research is a descriptive analysis research with quantitative methods. This study aims to look at teacher perceptions and student perceptions in implementing biology learning videos on plastic waste recycling material using sparkol videoscribe. Research data was obtained by distributing questionnaires to students and teachers. Furthermore, the product trial was conducted on 6 small group people, 26 large group students, and one biology subject teacher, before the media validation was done by the material expert and the media expert. The results of the validation by material experts with a percentage of 81.25% with the category "Very Good" while the results of the validation of the media experts 93.75% with the category "Very Good". In the small group trials, it received 92.5% responses in the "very good" category while in the large group trials it got 87.2% responses. Teachers' perceptions in the field of biological studies received 87.5% responses in the category of "very good" based on that the media was appropriate to use.


2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 252
Author(s):  
Philip Cass

Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd. Auckland: Pearson, 2013. ISBN 978144255826A generaton after the capitalist roaders took over the New Zealand Labour Party, the country’s political landscape is bleak. As described in this new book, it is one in which no political party is interested in any ideology except staying in power, no party will do anything that might offend a focus group, PR hacks control policy, political party membership has all but disappeared, the public is almost totally disengaged and most of the media has neither the time, the skill nor the inclination to cover politics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Logan Page

<p>Tertiary education, once a purely domestic affair, has become an increasingly globalised industry over previous decades. Whilst the international sector has grown to being New Zealand's fourth largest export market (Ministry of Education, 2016), there is a lack of credible research on the demand of international students.    This thesis aims to provide a greater understanding of the determinants of international student demand, both in New Zealand and internationally. I firstly provide a descriptive analysis of the trends in the international student market for New Zealand and 27 OECD countries. Secondly, I use a fixed-effects approach to analyse the demand of international students within New Zealand, using fees data at the course-by-university level. Thirdly, I then generalise this approach to the international market to provide an analysis of the demand for international students travelling to the OECD.    The findings from these analyses imply that the demand for international university education is relatively inelastic. The impact of a marginal increase in fees decreases the number of EFTS/students at a proportion of less than one. Furthermore, this effect is generally not statistically distinguishable from zero.</p>


FIKRAH ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 391
Author(s):  
Firmanda Taufiq ◽  
Lalu Wahyu Putra Utama

Today's technological developments have a broad impact on people's lives, including religious areas. The ease of access to information does not have a positive impact on Islamic da'wah but is also used as a provocative tool, as it ensnares Ahok. The purpose of this article is to examine how social media is used to spread the news about the condition of Muslims in Indonesia. The method used in this article is descriptive analysis by reviewing and examining the information content of social media, especially the news of the Islamic community in Indonesia. The implications of this article are expected to provide a clear picture of how social media is used in the social and political movements of Muslims in Indonesia. The result is that the media has a strategic position in describing, conceptualizing and influencing a community phenomenon.


2001 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-127
Author(s):  
Jane Johnston

Despite widespread legal analysis and critical review over the past 20 years, television access into the Australian court system has been slow and piecemeal, with Australia falling behind Canadian and New Zealand initiatives in this area. A recent major report into camera access in the Federal Court has refocused attention on this area, but analysis continues to be primarily from a legal perspective rather than a media one. This paper considers the televised court coverage in Australia to this point, analyses change in the international environment and suggests possible futures for the televising of Australian courts, while also attempting to lay some foundations for discussion beyond the legal, and into the media, domain.


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