{"title":"Media and academia: the intriguing case of the Pacific Media Center","authors":"D. Robie","doi":"10.1080/01296612.2022.2118802","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Te Amokura: Pacific Media Center (PMC) was founded at Auckland University of Technology (AUT) in October 2007 at a time of great turbulence in the Pacific (Robie, 2018). Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban, at the time New Zealand’s Minister of Pacific Island Affairs before she later became Victoria University of Wellington’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor (Pasifika), launched the center and strongly welcomed the initiative (Robie, 2017). She returned a decade later in November 2017 as guest of honor to celebrate the center’s 10th anniversary. In 2007, corruption, gender violence, and other human rights violations were rife across the Asia-Pacific region. There were arbitrary, unlawful, and extrajudicial killings by elements of the security services in the Philippines (but not anything like the scale during the “war on drugs” era of President Rodrigo Duterte from 2016 to 2022). In Timor-Leste, security forces carried out nine killings in 2007—less than a third of the 29 recorded the previous year—and there were human rights violations against journalists and other civilians. These circumstances were fertile ground for the establishment of both the PMC at AUT (https://pmc.aut.ac.nz/) and its Pacific Media Watch (PMW) media freedom project as one of the first research and publication initiatives established under the university’s Creative Industries Research Institute (CIRI) umbrella, also established in 2007. The PMW project had been transferred to AUT’s PMC from the University of Papua New Guinea and University of Technology Sydney where it had been founded by ABC Four Corners investigative journalist Peter Cronau and me.","PeriodicalId":53411,"journal":{"name":"Media Asia","volume":"50 1","pages":"286 - 298"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Media Asia","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/01296612.2022.2118802","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Te Amokura: Pacific Media Center (PMC) was founded at Auckland University of Technology (AUT) in October 2007 at a time of great turbulence in the Pacific (Robie, 2018). Luamanuvao Dame Winnie Laban, at the time New Zealand’s Minister of Pacific Island Affairs before she later became Victoria University of Wellington’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor (Pasifika), launched the center and strongly welcomed the initiative (Robie, 2017). She returned a decade later in November 2017 as guest of honor to celebrate the center’s 10th anniversary. In 2007, corruption, gender violence, and other human rights violations were rife across the Asia-Pacific region. There were arbitrary, unlawful, and extrajudicial killings by elements of the security services in the Philippines (but not anything like the scale during the “war on drugs” era of President Rodrigo Duterte from 2016 to 2022). In Timor-Leste, security forces carried out nine killings in 2007—less than a third of the 29 recorded the previous year—and there were human rights violations against journalists and other civilians. These circumstances were fertile ground for the establishment of both the PMC at AUT (https://pmc.aut.ac.nz/) and its Pacific Media Watch (PMW) media freedom project as one of the first research and publication initiatives established under the university’s Creative Industries Research Institute (CIRI) umbrella, also established in 2007. The PMW project had been transferred to AUT’s PMC from the University of Papua New Guinea and University of Technology Sydney where it had been founded by ABC Four Corners investigative journalist Peter Cronau and me.
the Amokura: Pacific Media Center (PMC)于2007年10月在奥克兰理工大学(AUT)成立,当时太平洋正经历着巨大的动荡(robbie, 2018)。Luamanuvao温妮·拉班女士(Dame Winnie Laban)当时是新西兰太平洋岛屿事务部长,后来成为惠灵顿维多利亚大学助理副校长(帕西菲卡),她发起了该中心,并对该倡议表示强烈欢迎(罗比,2017)。十年后的2017年11月,她作为贵宾再次来到这里,庆祝该中心成立10周年。2007年,腐败、性别暴力和其他侵犯人权的行为在亚太地区普遍存在。菲律宾的安全部门也有任意、非法和法外杀戮(但与2016年至2022年罗德里戈·杜特尔特(Rodrigo Duterte)总统“禁毒战争”时期的规模相比,这是天翻地别。)在东帝汶,安全部队在2007年实施了9起杀戮——不到前一年记录的29起杀戮的三分之一——并且侵犯了记者和其他平民的人权。这些情况为在AUT建立PMC (https://pmc.aut.ac.nz/)和太平洋媒体观察(PMW)媒体自由项目提供了肥沃的土壤,该项目是在该大学创意产业研究所(CIRI)的框架下建立的第一批研究和出版倡议之一,也成立于2007年。PMW项目是从巴布亚新几内亚大学和悉尼科技大学转移到AUT的PMC的,该项目是由ABC四角调查记者彼得·克罗诺和我在悉尼科技大学创立的。