Professor Kerry Philip Green teaches and researches at the University of South Australia. He specialises in newspaper audience research in print and online, computer-assisted journalism, multimedia journalism, and news media organisation and management.
Professor Green has been the project leader of a Federal Government-funded project investigating Trauma and the Newsroom. The project conducted research into psychological trauma that difficult reporting assignments may cause to both journalists and their audience members.
He has been a Chief Investigator in a nationally funded project that investigated the alignment between journalism curricula and industry needs, and also has participated in a national research project, funded by the... Read more
About me
Professor Kerry Philip Green teaches and researches at the University of South Australia. He specialises in newspaper audience research in print and online, computer-assisted journalism, multimedia journalism, and news media organisation and management.
Professor Green has been the project leader of a Federal Government-funded project investigating Trauma and the Newsroom. The project conducted research into psychological trauma that difficult reporting assignments may cause to both journalists and their audience members.
He has been a Chief Investigator in a nationally funded project that investigated the alignment between journalism curricula and industry needs, and also has participated in a national research project, funded by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship, investigating the representation of ethnic diversity in Australia’s news media.
Professor Green has a background in the print media, with experience as a daily newspaper editor in Queensland. He holds a PhD in journalism from the University of Queensland, a Masters degree in Journalism and bachelor degrees in Economics and Arts.
About me
About me
Doctor of Philosophy (Journalism) University of Queensland
Master of Journalism University of Queensland
Bachelor of Economics University of Queensland
Bachelor of Arts University of Queensland
Research
Research outputs for the last seven years are shown below. To see earlier years visit ORCID or Scopus
Open access indicates that an output is open access.
Year | Output |
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2012 |
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2010 |
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2009 |
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2008 |
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Year | Output |
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2011 |
5
4
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2009 |
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2009 |
Tanner, S & Green, KP 2009, 'Introduction'. |
Year | Output |
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2011 |
Green, KP 2011, Caught in a spin-cycle, The Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance, Australia.
Open access
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Year | Output |
---|---|
2009 |
Tanner, S & Green, KP 2009, Introduction. |
External engagement & recognition
Organisation | Country |
---|---|
Bond University | AUSTRALIA |
Charles Sturt University | AUSTRALIA |
Dart Centre for Journalism and Trauma Australasia | AUSTRALIA |
Griffith University | AUSTRALIA |
Hunter New England Area Health Service | AUSTRALIA |
Queensland University of Technology | AUSTRALIA |
The University of Wollongong | AUSTRALIA |
University of Canberra | AUSTRALIA |
University of Newcastle | AUSTRALIA |
University of South Australia | AUSTRALIA |
University of Wollongong | AUSTRALIA |
External engagement & recognition
Engagement/recognition | Year |
---|---|
MemberJournalism Education Association |
2018 |
MemberMedia Entertainment and Arts Alliance |
2018 |
MemberAustralia and New Zealand Communication Association |
2018 |
Board MemberChannel 44 |
2017 |
Chair, Academic Advisory BoardCarnegie Mellon University-Australia |
2017 |
MemberJournalism Education Association |
2017 |
MemberMedia Entertainment and Arts Alliance |
2017 |
MemberAustralia and New Zealand Communication Association |
2017 |
Teaching & student supervision
Teaching & student supervision
Supervisions from 2010 shown
Thesis title | Student status |
---|---|
`Churn and burn¿: investigating the risk and impact of traumatic assignments on journalists in Australia | Current |
An Australian story: media and memory in the making of Anzac Day | Completed |
'E-political marketing: new media campaign'. The role of new media and traditional media in political campaign strategies¿ in the 2014 presidential election in Indonesia | Completed |
Fear and loathing in the global village: growing resistance to moral panics blocks the Australian government's internet filter | Completed |
Reversing the North-South flow - viewing Al Jazeera's talk show The Opposite Direction with Arab-Islamic diasporic audiences in Australia | Completed |
The role of technology in framing and agenda setting in contemporary Australian media: reporting the Port Arthur massacre and Lindt cafe siege | Completed |
Utility drives adoption: diffusion of the internet in rural China | Completed |