Academic literature on the topic 'Terrorism and mass media Australia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Terrorism and mass media Australia"

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Johnston, Jane, and Mark Pearson. "Australia’s media climate: Time to renegotiate control." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 14, no. 2 (September 1, 2008): 72–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v14i2.945.

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In 2007, Australia was rated by two international media bodies as well down the chain in media freedom. Within its own borders, internal media groups—in particular the Australian Press Council and the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance, as well as a consortium of major employer groups—have recently released reports investigating the position of media freedoms. This atricle examines a select few of these shrinking freedoms which range from the passive restrcitions on access to documents to the overt threat of imprisonment for publishing sensitive material. In particular, it considers laws relating to freedom of information, camera access to courts, shield laws and whistleblower protection and finally revamped anti-terrorism laws. The article maps the landscape of Australia's downgraded press fredom and suggests that laws controlling media reportage need to be renegotiated.
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Rindrasih, Erda. "Media Framing of Disasters and Its Implications for Tourism Industry Policy: Case of Surabaya terrorist attack 2018 and Mt. Agung eruption 2017, Indonesia." Jurnal Humaniora 34, no. 2 (December 19, 2022): 137. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jh.75254.

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Tourist destinations worldwide are periodically jeopardised by natural disaster events that threaten tourists’ safety; consequently, the tourism industry is impacted. Mass media has a role to communicate and warn the public about disaster. Media portrayal on disaster events is likely to contribute to the tourism industry recovery and resilience. However, media has played a role in sending a negative message to tourists, making them hesitate to visit the destination. Limited researches have focused on how the media frames disaster events, and how policy makers could intervene. Based on analysis of media coverage of the Surabaya terrorist attack in 2018 and Mt. Agung eruption in 2017, this paper looked at how media framed disaster events and its consequences to the tourism industry policy. A content analysis of mass media from both national and international newspapers of Australia, Malaysia, and Singapore were conducted. The research identified five different framings on the two disasters, including source of problems, impact, solution, responsibility, and adaptive versus maladaptive. Findings also highlights the limited policy response towards these potentially negative media portrayal. Based on these findings, partnership between media and the government should be fostered to encourage post-disaster recovery.
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R. S. Az-Zubaidy, Thamir. "An Iraqi Refugee in the Australian Suburb in Ben Eltham’s The Pacific Solution." لارك 1, no. 32 (November 28, 2018): 11–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.31185/lark.vol1.iss32.1254.

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Ben Eltham’s The Pacific Solution (2013) deals with several issues such as nationalism, political intimidation, racism and stereotyping of Muslims. It critiques the Howard government’s hard-line policy with Asylum seekers and its amendment of the migration act, known as the ‘Pacific Solution’, which excludes offshore islands from Australia’s migration zone and undermines thereby refugees’ attempts to seek better chances of life. This is portrayed on stage through the reaction of three white Australian housemates to the arrival at their front door of an Iraqi refugee to apply for asylum. In this paper, I investigate the representation of cultural diversity in the play and argue that it is a critique of dysfunctional models of inclusion where persons from minor cultures are marginalised in the Australian national and social spaces. In so doing, I consider some of the concepts discussed in Ghassan Hage’s White Nation: Fantasies of White Supremacy in a Multicultural Society (2000), namely those of managerial capacity, tolerance, and the dialectic of inclusion and exclusion. In addition to critiquing the dysfunctional models of including Muslim refugees, the play examines their representation in the mainstream media and their treatment by the legal process in Australia. To explore the impact of this on Muslim refugees’ alienation and marginalisation, I investigate studies of the representation of Muslims in the Australian mass media and their relevance to the stereotyping of Muslims as terrorists in the play. Drawing on the above, I argue that, through this play, Eltham criticised the Howard government’s inhumane treatment of Asylum seekers and its dissemination of Australian norms as aligning with its premises.
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Hudoshnyk, Oksana, and Liliia Temchenko. "Discussion aspects of interdisciplinary interaction of journalism and oral history." Synopsis: Text Context Media 28, no. 2 (2022): 95–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.28925/2311-259x.2022.2.7.

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The article presents the context of modern scientific debates on the boundaries of interdisciplinarity. The subject of the study is the common procedure of the use of oral history practices in the mass media space. The oral history itself is changing rapidly under the pressure of digital platforms such as StoryCorps (USA), Listening Project (UK), The Story Project (Australia), and The Tale of a Town (Canada). Another key thing is the fact that the changes affected not only the technological process of archiving and dissemination of information but also the basic foundations of oral history, which is its methodology. The in-depth interview is replaced by the “rapid response collecting” method and historical storytelling. The purpose of the article is to outline the discussion field of the modern scientific discourse of the problem, to present the most significant interdisciplinary interaction using the example of world and Ukrainian media, namely: coverage of contradictory and ambiguous interpretations of historical facts; narrative; prolonged communication; multimedia and multiplatform. The research methods are traditional empirical methods of observation and description, as well as paradigmatic analysis of the functional features of oral history practices in journalism. Results of the research. Basic characterological directions proposed in the study allowed us to present the main points of discussion in various aspects: the use of oral historical materials, especially “hidden history” through the eyes of eyewitnesses, become an additional source of journalistic clarifications, investigations and expansion of the information agenda; addressing marginal themes of history, giving a voice to terrorist groups and participants in genocides poses extremely complex and ethically controversial questions to the audience; multimedia and multiplatform give new life to oral history information, while performance, theatre and participation are added to the usual practices of new media. The most expressive manifestation of changes in this interdisciplinary discourse is the practice of digital storytelling; its media use is illustrated by the BBC’s Capture Wales digital storytelling project. As part of the scientific discussion that has continued for the last few years, the issues of democratization of history, mass inclusion in digital archives, the creation of powerful social projects, and attempts to distance oral history as a separate discipline have been actualized. Moreover, it is recognized that, like any creative practice, interdisciplinarity remains a wide field for experimentation and creativity.
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Altheide, David L. "The mass media and terrorism." Discourse & Communication 1, no. 3 (August 2007): 287–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750481307079207.

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Altheide, D. L. "The Mass Media, Crime and Terrorism." Journal of International Criminal Justice 4, no. 5 (November 1, 2006): 982–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jicj/mql061.

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Ashghor, Aly. "Mediasi Massal Terorisme: Pengantar Critical Terrorism Studies." Jurnal Keamanan Nasional 4, no. 1 (May 25, 2018): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.31599/jkn.v4i1.349.

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This paper is a development of research conducted by the Center for National Security Studies (Puskamnas) Bhayangkara University of Jakarta on a map of global terrorism obtained from coverage of 56 (fifty six) online mass media in the world throughout the year 2017. Mass mediation of terrorism is a critical effort and a reflective way in trying to understand the practice and the articulation of the terrorism discourse in the world, especially on how the media enters and enlivens the practice of terrorism concept. This paper shows that the social construction of terrorism tends to be influenced by the Western mass media. In the construction of the mass media, the notion of terrorism today is the product of the discourse of the Western mass media. The dominance of the Western mass mediation terrorism resulted in the construction of terrorism discourse associated with the movement of Islamism and Communism. The mass mediation of terrorism demonstrates by Israeli atrocities against Palestinians tend to disregard aas acts of state terrorism. Threfore, the implication of state-centrist terrorism in counter terrorism policies are more oriented towards national security than human security.
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Junaedi, Fajar. "Relasi Terorisme dan Media." Jurnal ASPIKOM 1, no. 1 (January 9, 2017): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.24329/aspikom.v1i1.5.

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Terrorism is the major issue in the recent years. As political communications forms, terrorism can only have significance as a communication act if the action of terrorism group transmitted through the mass media to the large audience. Terrorist did violence and other terror actions in order to get support from public, make fearness for institutional government and raise funding from their supporters.
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Miftajanna, Shepriyani. "Peran Media Massa Barat Membingkai Aksi Terorisme." Jurnal Komunikasi 13, no. 2 (September 16, 2022): 44–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.31294/jkom.v13i2.11756.

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The 9/11 terrorism attack has become one of the issues covered specifically by the media. Terrorism stereotypes are closely related to Islam due to the prominence of news broadcast by the media. The media have a role in influencing public perceptions. Agenda setting and framing theory can explain that mass media has the ability to transfer two elements, namely awareness and information to the public agenda and its attention to issues that are only considered important by the mass media. The intensity of news about terrorism is broadcast more than in other spheres and the framing of terrorism is related to Islamic groups, thus affecting people's perceptions of labeling acts of terrorism that are identical to Islam. As well as using the functions of the media agenda, public agenda and policy agenda to analyze the role of the media in reviewing terrorism.
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Pearson, Mark, and Naomi Busst. "Anti-terror laws and the media after 9/11: Three models in Australia, NZ and the Pacific." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 12, no. 2 (September 1, 2006): 9–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v12i2.859.

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This article reviews some of the main anti-terrorism laws in Australia and New Zealand and assesses their impact upon the media in the five years since the terrorist attacks on the United States in 2001. It also makes some observations about anti-terrorism laws in the Pacific Islands and recommends further research on this important topic. It identifies the main intrusions into press freedom emanating from such laws and finds quite different approaches with resultant impacts on media freedoms. Australia, while claiming to be a liberal democracy, has taken tough measures against terrorism at the expense of some press freedoms. New Zealand, with freedom of expression protected in its Bill of Rights, has implemented counter-terrorism measures without major limitations on media freedoms. Pacific Island nations, many troubled by internal strife, appear to have been slow to comply with even the very basic international protocols on counter-terrorism.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Terrorism and mass media Australia"

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Aly, Anne M. "Audience responses to the Australian media discourse on terrorism and the 'other' : the fear of terrorism between and among Australian Muslims and the broader community." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2008. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/176.

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The terrorist attcks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon on 11 September 2001 heralded an era of unprecedented media and public attention on the global phenomenon of terrorism. Implicit in the Australian media's discourse on terrorism that evolved out of the events of 11 September is a construction of the Western world (and specifically Australia) as perpetually at threat of terrorism.
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Wang, Wei. "Newspaper commentaries on terrorism in China and Australia a contrastive genre study /." Connect to full text, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1701.

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Doctor of Philosophy(PhD)
This thesis is a contrastive genre study which explores newspaper commentaries on terrorism in Chinese and Australian newspapers. The study examines the textual patterning of the Australian and Chinese commentaries, interpersonal and intertextual features of the texts as well as considers possible contextual factors which might contribute to the formation of the newspaper commentaries in the two different languages and cultures. For the framework of its analysis, the study draws on systemic functional linguistics, English for Specific Purposes and new rhetoric genre studies, critical discourse analysis, and discussions of the role of the mass media in the two different cultures. The study reveals that Chinese writers often use explanatory rather than argumentative expositions in their newspaper commentaries. They seem to distance themselves from outside sources and seldom indicate endorsement of these sources. Australian writers, on the other hand, predominantly use argumentative expositions to argue their points of view. They integrate and manipulate outside sources in various ways to establish and provide support for the views they express. It is argued that these textual and intertextual practices are closely related to contextual factors, especially the roles of the media and opinion discourse in contemporary China and Australia. The study, by providing both a textual and contextual view of the genre under investigation in the two languages and cultures, aims to establish a framework for contrastive rhetoric research which moves beyond the text into the context of production and interpretation of the texts as a way of exploring reasons for the linguistic and rhetorical choices made in the two sets of texts.
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McCarthy, Sharon. "Beyond the polarising constructions of terrorism : Challenging the discourses that silence public debate in Western Australia." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2013. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/1011.

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Since the events of the 11 September that saw the downing of the United States World Trade Centre towers and the partial destruction of the Pentagon in 2001, a significant focus politically, academically, and publically has been given to the issue of terrorism. During this past decade a number of labels, assumptions, and narratives have become dominant in an effort to explain what many continue to describe as a contested and complex phenomenon. The evidence indicates that the privileging of the ‘new terrorism’ narrative has functioned to contribute to many of the controversial counter-terrorism policies and practices both in Australia and globally, as well as the demonisation and marginalisation of Muslim communities in much of the Western world. While many studies in the past decade have focused on examining the discourses on terrorism, including but not limited to the War on Terror, Islamic terrorism, and the media constructions of Muslims, few researchers have explored how people work with these typical constructions of terrorism to effect their own social positioning and identity development. Within a Critical Discursive Psychological framework (see Wetherell, 1998), terrorism is understood as an ontologically unstable and discursively constructed social category. As such the current study explored the various discursive constructions of terrorism at three specific levels. Firstly, an extensive examination of the academic literature was undertaken as a means of situating the often neglected knowledge about terrorism within its historical, cultural and political context. Secondly, a review was conducted of the primary West Australian newspaper reports from 2001 until 2005 to explore how the dominant labels, narratives and assumptions about terrorism have been represented, (re)produced and resisted at an institutional level. Finally, using interviews from 21 local West Australian residents, I examined the identity that individuals constructed for themselves and others in drawing on many of these narratives and assumptions within their responses. Four interpretative repertoires of terrorism were identified and these repertoires set up a David and Goliath battle ground of binary opposites that functioned to position terrorism, and those seen to engage in terrorist activities, as either morally understandable if not defensible versus culturally dysfunctional and oppressive. These highly polarised repertoires were used by participants to navigate this emotive, troubled and exclusionary phenomenon. However, while the more positive and morally acceptable repertoires initially helped to support individual identity construction and positions of the self, they also functioned to challenge other aspects of the participant’s lives where participants became positioned as responsible for the exclusionary or oppressive practices towards others. As a consequence, in trying to make sense of terrorism, the participants were confronted with a morally unmanageable situation where full adherence to any one understanding meant being negatively positioned with an unwanted identity. In their attempts to mitigate the shame associated with being stigmatised and socially excluded as a result, the participants utilised a number of moderating practices that functioned to self silence and subjugate their own voices. Ultimately, this meant that while the four repertoires were often deployed together, the need to continuously resist all four positions to varying degrees, ideologically functioned to silence and exclude the participants from the terrorism conversation. It was therefore argued that within the Western understanding, the discourses on terrorism have become discourses of shame. These findings suggest that the discourses on terrorism are much more complex for the average person than has been considered previously and have implications that go well beyond those of the Muslim communities.
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Wise, Gianni Ian Media Arts College of Fine Arts UNSW. "Scenario House." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. Media Arts, 2006. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/26230.

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Scenario House, a gallery based installation, is comprised of a room constructed as a ???family room??? within a domestic space, a television with a looped video work and a sound componant played through a 5.1 sound system. The paper is intended to give my work context in relation to the processes leading up to its completion. This is achieved through clarification of the basis for the installation including previous socio-political discourses within my art practice. It then focuses on ways that the installation Scenario House is based on gun practice facilities such as the Valhalla Shooting Club. Further it gives an explanation of the actual production, in context with other art practices. It was found that distinctions between ???war as a game??? and the actual event are being lost within ???simulation revenge scenarios??? where the borders distinguishing gaming violence, television violence and revenge scenarios are increasingly indefinable. War can then be viewed a spectacle where the actual event is lost in a simplified simulation. Scenario House as installation allows audience immersion through sound spatialisation and physical devices. Sound is achieved by design of a 5.1 system played through a domestic home theatre system. The physical design incorporates the dual aspect of a gun shooting club and a lounge room. Further a film loop is shown on the television monitor as part of the domestic space ??? it is non-narrative and semi-documentary in style. The film loop represents the mediation of the representation of fear where there is an exclusion of ???the other??? from the social body. When considering this installation it is important to note that politics and art need not be considered as representing two separate and permanent realities. Conversely there is a need to distance politicised art production from any direct political campaign work in so far as the notion of a campaign constitutes a fixed and inflexible space for intellectual and cultural production. Finally this paper expresses the need to maintain a critical openness to media cultures that dominate political discourse. Art practices such as those of Martha Rosler, Haacke and Paul McCarthy are presented as effective strategies for this form of production.
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Al-Ameri, Mamdoh Suleiman. "Media and USF Students' Perception of Terrorism." Scholar Commons, 2013. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4429.

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This study examined the influence of mass media on students' perceptions of terrorism by applying the situational theory of publics (Grunig & Hunt, 1984). Behavior is the consequence of perception of reality. But perception of reality is not always consistent with the reality itself. Because of the important role of the media in shaping perceptions, terrorist organizations rely on it to spread fear and advance their political goals beyond the people directly affected by their attacks. The media not only spreads the news of an attack, it contributes significantly to formulating and disseminating the message of terrorist organizations. This study explores University of South Florida (USF) students' perceptions of terrorism, and the role of mass media in shaping such perceptions. It also examines assumptions, asks pertinent questions, and seeks answers by conducting a survey of college students. The findings of this study support the basic premise of the situational theory of publics and contribute to better understanding of how media influences perceptions of terrorism. The findings of this study and future studies on the same subject might be used to better educate students, and inform communication professionals about methods to increase awareness about the U.S. position on terrorism.
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Moser, Gregory E. "Defining Terrorism: A Framing Analysis of the Evolution of “Terrorism” Post-9/11." Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1260391532.

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Nagley, Andrew Guy. "Changing People's Reaction to Terrorism." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1988. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc501129/.

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Two hundred and fifty-three subjects were used in an experiment to try to determine how differences in news media presentations affect the reader's view of terrorism. Two stories about a terrorist attack were used, one describing a bombing, the other a hijacking. Both stories had two versions using no one injured or eight innocent people injured. One group of subjects was given no additional information about terrorism. The second group was given information after the description that emphasized the salience of terrorism. The third group received information that de-emphasized the seriousness of terrorism. Subjects were also given a questionnaire designed to measure authoritarianism and one to measure conservatism. It was found that subjects scoring high on authoritarianism or conservativism favored more severe punishment for terrorists than did those scoring lower on the two scales. Findings did not support the hypothesis that providing people with information about terrorism could lessen the impact of terrorist events.
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Deitrickson, Amy D. "The us/them binary an analysis of local media's framing of local terrorists /." Bowling Green, Ohio : Bowling Green State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=bgsu1189655463.

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Ivanova, Andrea. "Terrorism, Media and Public Perception: Influence of Media on Public Perception on Terrorism Related Matters." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2018. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1157634/.

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The purpose of this study is to measure and examine whether terrorism continues to be highly feared and over-predicted, whether exposure to mass or news media influences perceptions of terrorism, whether mass media remains a significant source of information on terrorism related matters and whether people are prepared to act in the event of a terrorist attack. The respondents in this research consisted of a sample of 135 students aged 18 and over, at a participating mid-size university in a southern state, who completed a self-reported online survey on voluntary basis. The findings of the study suggests that the respondents access terrorism related news-media on both weekly and daily basis. Those with frequent access tend to overestimate the likelihood of a domestic terrorist attack and the threat posed by terrorism and tend to show higher levels of fear associated with terrorism. The majority of the respondents indicated average access of news-media of once or twice a week, or no use at all and they tend to not overestimate the likelihood of a terrorist attack, indicate some or no fear in relation to terrorism and tend to have more accurate perception of the current threat posed by terrorism.
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Vultee, Fred. "Securitization as a theory of media effects the contest over the framing of political violence /." Diss., Columbia, Mo. : University of Missouri-Columbia, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10355/4792.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2007.
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on December 14, 2007) Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Books on the topic "Terrorism and mass media Australia"

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Aly, Anne. A study of audience responses to the media discourse about the 'other ': The fear of terrorism between Australian Muslims and the broader community. Lewiston, N.Y: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010.

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A study of audience response to the media discourse about the 'other ': The fear of terrorism between Australian Muslims and the broader community. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2010.

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Flanagan, Richard. The unknown terrorist. New York: Atlantic, 2007.

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The unknown terrorist. New York: Grove Press, 2006.

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The unknown terrorist. New York: Grove Press, 2006.

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Flanagan, Richard. The unknown terrorist. London: Atlantic, 2007.

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David, Lindsay, and Watterson Ray, eds. Media law in Australia. 3rd ed. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995.

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1934-, Paletz David L., and Schmid Alex Peter, eds. Terrorism and the media. Newbury Park, Calif: Sage, 1992.

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Stuart, Cunningham, and Turner Graeme, eds. The media & communications in Australia. Crows Nest, N.S.W: Allen & Unwin, 2002.

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Armstrong, Mark. Media law in Australia. 2nd ed. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Terrorism and mass media Australia"

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Ubayasiri, Kasun. "The Efficacy of Censorship as a Response to Terrorism." In The Handbook of Media and Mass Communication Theory, 798–818. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118591178.ch43.

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Weston, Stephanie A. "Framing the Japanese Homeland Security Debate: Mass Media and Public Opinion." In Japanese Public Opinion and the War on Terrorism, 43–89. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230613836_3.

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McKenzie, Jordan, Roger Patulny, Rebecca E. Olson, and Marlee Bower. "Mass Emotional Events: Rethinking Emotional Contagions after COVID-19." In Dystopian Emotions, 71–88. Policy Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529214543.003.0005.

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This chapter highlights the impacts of social media on contemporary future thinking, offering the concept of mass emotional events to advance the concept of emotional contagions in the time of the COVID-19 pandemic. It sets out this new conceptual framework in contrast to earlier models for thinking about emotional climates and landscapes. It also provides reflections that contrast the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the Black Summer bushfires in Australia as examples of mass emotional phenomena. The chapter looks at recent work on theories of collective emotions that has recognized emotions as phenomena that spread between individuals and groups to form collective emotional moods, landscapes, and climates. It discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic has caused sudden and dramatic shifts in social interaction that warrants a reimagining of emotional contagions.
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"Terrorism in Cyberspace." In Mass Media and Modern Warfare, 141–88. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315594224-6.

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Jenkins, Philip. "Terrorism and the Mass Media." In Images of Terror, 138–62. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351310246-8.

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Nacos, Brigitte L. "Tactics of Terrorism." In Exchanging Terrorism Oxygen for Media Airwaves, 110–23. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5776-2.ch008.

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In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Palestinian terrorists staged a number of spectacular hijackings of commercial airliners, exploited the often prolonged hostage situations to win massive news coverage of their political grievances, and seemed to inspire other groups to use the same tactics to highlight their grievances and demands. While the bombing of facilities was in the past and remains today the preferred mode of terrorist attacks, terrorists have also carried out assassinations, suicide missions, and kidnappings with various tactics fashionable at certain times and less so during other periods. For that reason, terrorism scholars, government officials, and journalists have pondered the question of mass-mediated contagion for decades without agreeing whether news about terrorist attacks inspires copycat strikes. Given the advances in communication and information technology and changes in the global media landscape during the last decade or so, this chapter reconsiders arguments surrounding contagion theories and contends that old and new media are important carriers of the virus of hate and instrumental in tactical and ideological contagion.
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Weimann, Gabriel. "Terrorism as Theater: Mass Media and Redefinition of Image." In Language & Communication in Israel, 497–518. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351291040-28.

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Hackett, Robert. "Understanding Media During Times of Terrorism." In Journalism and Ethics, 49–60. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8359-2.ch004.

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Political violence, including terrorism, can be regarded as a form of (distorted) communication, in which media spectacles play an integral role. Conversely, mass-mediated communication can be regarded as a form of violence, and even terror, in several respects. Media are often propagandistic facilitators to state terror. More broadly, they may help to cultivate a political climate of fear and authoritarianism, contributing to conflict-escalating feedback loops. Even more broadly, beyond media representations, dominant media institutions are arguably embedded in relations of global economic, social, and cultural inequality—constituting a form of structural violence. Notwithstanding its democratic potential, the Internet does not comprise a clear alternative in practice, and neither censorship of terrorist spectacles nor the intensified pursuit of dominant forms of journalistic “objectivity” offer viable ways to reduce the media's imbrication with violence. Three potentially more productive strategies explored in this chapter include reforming the media field from within through the paradigm of Peace Journalism, supporting the development of alternative and community media, and building movements for media reform and democratization.
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Hackett, Robert. "Understanding Media during Times of Terrorism." In Exchanging Terrorism Oxygen for Media Airwaves, 33–43. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5776-2.ch003.

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Political violence, including terrorism, can be regarded as a form of (distorted) communication, in which media spectacles play an integral role. Conversely, mass-mediated communication can be regarded as a form of violence, and even terror, in several respects. Media are often propagandistic facilitators to state terror. More broadly, they may help to cultivate a political climate of fear and authoritarianism, contributing to conflict-escalating feedback loops. Even more broadly, beyond media representations, dominant media institutions are arguably embedded in relations of global economic, social, and cultural inequality—constituting a form of structural violence. Notwithstanding its democratic potential, the Internet does not comprise a clear alternative in practice, and neither censorship of terrorist spectacles nor the intensified pursuit of dominant forms of journalistic “objectivity” offer viable ways to reduce the media's imbrication with violence. Three potentially more productive strategies explored in this chapter include reforming the media field from within through the paradigm of Peace Journalism, supporting the development of alternative and community media, and building movements for media reform and democratization.
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Smith, Rosie. "Terrorism, Politics, and Spectacles of Criminal Justice." In The Spectacle of Criminal Justice: Mass Media and the Criminal Trial, 97–118. Emerald Publishing Limited, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83982-822-520221014.

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Conference papers on the topic "Terrorism and mass media Australia"

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Terziyska, Ivana, Setu Shah, and Xiao Luo. "Are Recent Terrorism Trends Reflected in Social Media?" In 2017 IEEE 14th International Conference on Mobile Ad-Hoc and Sensor Systems (MASS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mass.2017.90.

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Patel, Keshav. "INTELLIGENCE AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN AN ERA OF GLOBAL TERRORISM." In World Conference on Media and Mass Communication. The International Institute of Knowledge Management (TIIKM), 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.17501/24246778.2019.5115.

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Chummuangpak, Manoch. "EXPLORING REFUGEE AGENCY THROUGH DOCUMENTARY PRODUCTION OF RESETTLING KAREN IN AUSTRALIA." In World Conference on Media and Mass Communication. The International Institute of Knowledge Management (TIIKM), 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.17501/24246778.2019.5111.

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Junaidi, Junaidi. "Terrorism and Multiculturalism Issues in the Frame of the Mass Media in Indonesia." In International Conference on Ethics in Governance (ICONEG 2016). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iconeg-16.2017.70.

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Ролик, Екатерина Альбертовна, and Екатерина Евгеньевна Нечай. "MEDIA TRANSFORMATION OF ISLAMIC TERRORISM ON THE EXAMPLE OF USING THE TELEGRAM MESSENGER." In Национальная безопасность России: актуальные аспекты: сборник избранных статей Всероссийской научно-практической конференции (СанктПетербург, Май 2022). Crossref, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37539/nb197.2022.91.14.004.

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Статья рассматривает современный исламский терроризм в контексте распространения его идеологии через каналы средств массовой информации, сеть Интернет и мессенджер Телеграм, в целях террористических атак и вербовки людей по всему миру. Автор отмечает, что современный исламский терроризм находится на этапе медиатрансформации, то есть преобразования с использованием новейших виртуальных технологий, что затрудняет властям борьбу с терроризмом. This article considers modern Islamic terrorism in the context of spreading its ideology through various mass media channels, including the Internet, and the Telegram messenger, to organize terrorist attacks and to recruit people around the world. The author notes that modern Islamic terrorism is currently at the stage of media transformation using the latest virtual technologies, that makes it more challenging for the authorities to fight terrorism.
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Kazemi-Esfarjani, Pedram. "4 In defence of the goldwater rule – emergent politicized or state sponsored psychiatric overdiagnosis in mass media and rise and fall of totalitarian states in modern times europe and america." In Preventing Overdiagnosis Abstracts, December 2019, Sydney, Australia. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjebm-2019-pod.110.

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