#justjustice: Rewriting the roles of journalism in indigenous health
- Publisher:
- Intellect
- Publication Type:
- Journal Article
- Citation:
- Australian Journalism Review, 2017, 39, (2), pp. 107-118
- Issue Date:
- 2017-12-01
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| Filename | Description | Size | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ielapa.360484852967858.pdf | 350.12 kB |
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#JustJustice was developed as a crowd-funded, cross-disciplinary social journalism project to engage critically and respectfully with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples about solutions to the public health crisis of rising incarceration rates. The project was led by Aboriginal public health professionals and non-Indigenous health journalists and designers, and was informed by a decolonising methodology that privileged the perspectives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations and people. This paper presents #JustJustice as a case study, with analysis using an Aboriginal methodology, the Ngaa-binya evaluation framework. It highlights how professional and personal roles can be transformed through sharing journalism practices with community members and public health professionals, providing unique insights for journalism education, research and practice.
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