Preserving rural journalism
RESEARCHERS from Deakin University are seeking to ensure the future of highquality local journalism in rural and regional Australia to enhance democracy and the social fabric of communities beyond the metropole.
With almost 30 per cent of the nation’s population living in rural and regional areas, the country press represents a vital part of Australian journalism.
But the distance from major cities means rural news providers are not as well serviced by local news media as metropolitan outlets.
Deakin’s project, “Media innovation and the civic future of Australia’s country press”, investigates the challenges and opportunities across social, economic, cultural, political and technological contexts that can affect the sustainability of Australia’s press, particularly in the digital era.
It will also explore how insights from audiences, news sources and industry leaders can inform policy in the sector.
The research is funded by the Australian Research Council as part of its linkage
program. Led by Associate Professor Kristy Hess, from the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation,
the project researching Australian country newspapers is the largest of its kind.
It will provide urgently needed strategies to rethink media innovation and provide evidence to inform industry practice.
In collaboration with international scholars, community and stakeholder groups and industry experts, the research will build on two recent pilot projects funded by Deakin and the Country Press Association that explored circulation trends and stakeholder perceptions of country newspapers.
Deakin’s research seeks to develop sustainable models that can be used when developing federal communications policies, and to ensure that local news can survive the digital landscape.
Millions of people living in rural and regional communities around Australia depend on the country press as a reliable news source.
But the media landscape has seen rapid change over the past few decades, especially with the introduction of social media giants such as Facebook and Twitter, which has contributed to issues of misinformation and fake news.
Reliable news platforms are considered an essential service, important to enhancing democracy and wellbeing in rural communities.
This is a timely project and is the first comprehensive research assessing the health of Australia’s established country press.
It is anticipated the project will lead to a stronger, more collaborative news network, resulting in implementation of a media innovations model that will improve the quality of news and information flow and ensure the sustainability of newspapers in rural areas.
The research has already had an influence in government and media policy.
In 2020, it informed a senate inquiry submission led by Deakin University on media diversity.
It also informed a submission to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) on the mandatory bargaining code.
In December 2020, the research team hosted a local news panel at the Australian Journalism Research and Education conference, where the topic of quality rural journalism was discussed.
Deakin has partnered with Country Press Australia, which represents the rights of regional media outlets in negotiations with industry and government.
Country Press Australia is also educating the next generation of regional journalists through a dedicated Deakin course.
In February 2021, preliminary data from a survey conducted in November
2020 was presented to the Queensland government during a meeting with
Country Press Association representatives.
It will inform more than 174 local newspaper operations across Australia.
The survey, the biggest of its kind in Australia, records responses from 4000 local news readers.
In 2021, the research team will conduct a survey of social media users and interviews with media proprietors, journalists and editors to advance a media innovations agenda within the local news sector.