Associate Professor (Communication), Deakin University
Kristy Hess is an associate professor of communication at Deakin University. Her research focuses on the relationship between journalism, place-making and social order, especially in local and digital settings. She takes a critical cultural sociological approach to her work with specific emphasis on issues of media power and how everyday media-related practices inform understandings of news sustainability in the digital era. She is also interested in understanding centre/periphery tensions, especially in regards to perceptions of the rural, local and agricultural issues. Kristy is the co-author of two books (Palgrave, Routledge), co-editor of two published edited collections (Routledge) and is the associate editor of Digital Journalism (Routledge). She is currently a chief investigator on two projects funded by the Australian Research Council.
Local papers are central to our democracy. We must do more to bring them out of crisis
Sep 11, 2024 02:27 am UTC| Insights & Views Business
This is the second piece in a series on the Future of Australian media. You can read the first piece in the series here. Australians who are unaware of stories about social disorder and crime gripping Alice Springs must...
May 09, 2021 09:24 am UTC| Technology
Newspaper readers in rural and regional Australia are five times more likely to go directly to their local newspaper website than Google or Facebook for local information, and almost 10 times as likely to go to their local...
Local newspapers are an 'essential service'. They deserve a government rescue package, too
Apr 04, 2020 07:03 am UTC| Economy
The coronavirus pandemic has spawned a lexicon of its own. We have had to quickly incorporate words like self-isolation and social distancing into our everyday language to navigate it. Essential service is another one....