![]() ![]() ![]() Got any questions or suggestions for future topics?Įmail University supports academic freedom of speech. Australia: more guns now than before Port Arthur.There was a crucial difference in how they responded. and Australia had mass shootings one week apart. New Zealand made it illegal for anyone to download or share the Christchurch shooter’s manifesto.Don’t name them, don’t show them, but report everything else: a pragmatic proposal for denying mass killers the attention they seek and deterring future offenders.SAVE: recommendations for reporting on mass shootings.An ethics report card: 3 dilemmas for news coverage of mass shootings.How does covering a mass shooting affect the journalists themselves? (23:02).Media approach to a local shooting vs one that happens elsewhere.What changed in the wake of the Port Arthur attacks? (14:31).Did the Christchurch attack change the way social media operates? (9:36).What role does the media play in mass shootings? (1:00).He has a background as a journalist, newsreader, producer and radio presenter and is the current host of ABC weekly show “It’s Just Not Cricket”. Mr Greensmith is a lecturer in the School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry. ![]() In this episode, David speaks with journalist and Curtin University academic, Glynn Greensmith, who is currently researching the ways in which the media handles the reporting of mass shootings. Recent research also shows a disturbing trend where shooters seek to publicise their beliefs and intentions through media platforms in an effort to gain notoriety and infamy. There are growing concerns the detailed coverage is leading to copycat and contagion killings. Mass shootings are rare, but these heineous crimes have become a magnet for global media attention. ![]()
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