Asia-Pacific Nius

20 June 2014

QUT’s Pacific student journo news bureau team heading for Auckland

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The twin flags of Kanaky and France fluttering over New Caledonia ... student journalists will be exploring questions over the Pacific territory's future. Image: Lowy Institute/PMC
20 June 2014

Journalism students from Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Australia are embarking on a reporting tour next week, looking to help redress an imbalance in information about the South Pacific region.

The six students, mostly in their final year of studies, will be travelling to New Caledonia, Vanuatu and then Auckland - where they will be hosted by AUT's Pacific Media Centre.

The coordinator of the venture, senior lecturer Dr Lee Duffield, says the idea of the project is for students to sharpen their journalistic skills by working outside of familiar territory, and obtain some intercultural experience.

“We have had at least 17 such overseas field trips in the last 15 years or so, of which four have been to New Zealand or Papua New Guinea, not further afield in the region.

“Yet for Australians the South Pacific is the neighbourhood, and we do not hear enough about it, even though there is much government-to-government contact, tourism, other business and immigration.

“More and better media coverage can of course make for much better flow of information and much better understanding.”

Emma Clarke ... focus on the independence referendum. Image: QUTCountry newspaper
Bachelor of Journalism student Emma Clarke is preparing to take up a job with a country newspaper immediately after the field trip.

“Doing research on Pacific affairs is a different focus to that, but journalism is journalism - finding out and letting people know”, she says.

“From our backgrounding, it is plain that the focus in New Caledonia will be the ‘independence’ referendum, and the question of what date will finally be set for the vote.

“After the serious contretemps between Australia and France over nuclear testing, great efforts have been made to strengthen commercial, and also people-to-people ties, and we will be taking a measure of that.

“We have been interested in the news from Vanuatu about the reverence for custom, and many people’s determination to see that the pressures of modern life are matched with traditional values.

“We will be asking for explanations about it.”

The reporting group from Brisbane will be seeking out commentators with good knowledge of local conditions, in New Caledonia and Vanuatu, and later at Auckland, where they will be working on their media products.

Publishing reports
Throughout the three weeks journey, the group will be publishing their reports on  line, on the campus-based outlet QUT News (www.qutnews.com), and packaging radio reports for broadcast on multicultural radio, 4EB-FM – a half-hour “South Pacific Special Report”, at 1pm, Tuesday, July 22.  

Some reports will also be published by the PMC’s Pacific Scoop (general Pacific news) and PMC Online (media) news websites.

“I hope that in a modest but worthwhile way we can have some impact," says Duffield.

“QUT Journalism is one of the leading journalism schools placing people in the media industries, and if more of them are attuned to Pacific affairs, it is bound to flow on.

“Certainly the South Pacific is a seductive region where people want to go and stay; and there is no shortage of news or feature material to be obtained, whether it is about development issues and human health, the conflicts that arise, human rights and media rights, and the softer things, like finding magical places to be -- or visiting a coffee plantation that keeps the café society going back home.”      

Professor David Robie, director of the Pacific Media Centre, said he was delighted over the partnership with Duffield and his UQ student team and an opportunity to host the project.

"This is very much the mission of the PMC, to improve the quality and depth of news and analysis about the Pacific. We are pleased to help out."

The QUT Creative Industries Faculty. Image: QUTOther team members on the travelling news bureau from QUT:

Nick Kelly is a Journalism-Law double degree student who has been finding out about custom-and-law in Vanuatu, as well as making a short video of the group’s field trip, (requested by the university’s  International and Development department).

Jane Mahoney is a graduate studentin the Master of Journalism programme, adding a good professional credential to her portfolio.

Harriet Harvey is completing her Business-Journalism double degree. She is the field trip’s principal radio producer.

Jaleesa Simpson, in year 2, is doing a Bachelor of Mass Communication degree with Journalism Major.

Danielle Veivers is a year 3 student who has changed over from a Business-Law double degree course to Business-Journalism; taking the opportunity to fast-track her learning in the journalism field.

QUT Pacific news bureau stories at PMC Online

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David Robie

Professor, PMC Director

Professor David Robie is an author, journalist and media educator specialising in Asia-Pacific affairs.

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