book
The ABA's general approach to planning / Australian Broadcasting Authority [Australia]: Australian Broadcasting Authority, March 1998.
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journal article
The airways belong to you? in Lumiere (March-April, 1972) iss.14 p.28-29
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book
Australian motion picture yearbook 1980 / edited by Peter Beilby ; associate editor: Scott Murray North Melbourne, Victoria: Cinema Papers Pty Ltd, 1980.
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Breaking up the ABC / Glyn Davis Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1988.
Call No: 19ABC DAVAuthor: Davis, Glyn Source: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: Allen and UnwinPubDate: 1988PhysDes: 150 pages ; 22 cmSubject: AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION ; FUNDING. AUSTRALIA ; GOVERNMENT AID. AUSTRALIA ; GOVERNMENT CONTROL, TV. AUSTRALIA ; GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS. AUSTRALIA ; LAW AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; PROGRAMME CONTENT. AUSTRALIA ; PUBLIC BROADCASTING. AUSTRALIA ; SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE ; STATE AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA Summary: "The life and works of 'Aunty', the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, continue to be the subject of public debate and often heated controversy, but they are seldom analysed in any depth. In this book Glyn Davis sets out to take the ABC apart, layer by layer, to reveal the contradictions in purpose and form which bedevil Australia's public broadcasting network. Emphasising the interplay between the ABC and its social and political context, Breaking Up the ABC subjects the recent internal reforms to careful scrutiny. Will these reforms end 'Aunty's' perennial difficulties? Or is the organisation doomed to permanent crisis? Can the corporation, as David Hill hopes, win back an audience and the political support crucial to its continuing existence? Having broken up the institution, how should the pieces be rearranged? This book offers new combinations to ensure the continuing viability of public broadcasting in Australia."--BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes list of abbreviations, bibliographic references and index -- cover illustration and design by John WindusISBN: 0043370047Donation: Donated by Mike Counihan
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Decisions and reasons : inquiry into alleged cigarette advertising during the broadcast of the 1990 Australian Grand Prix, IP/91/33, October 1991 / Australian Broadcasting Tribunal [North Sydney]: Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, October 1991.
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Delivery items : a guide for film and video producers North Sydney: Australian Film Commission, 1992.
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journal article
Distribution : The Struggle Up North in Lumiere (September 1972) iss.16 p.29
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book
Film censorship in the Asia-Pacific region : Malaysia, Hong Kong and Australia compared / by Saw Tiong Guan London ; New York: Routledge, 2013.
Call No: 44(5) SAWAuthor: Saw, Tiong Guan Source: UKPlace: London ; New YorkPublisher: RoutledgePubDate: 2013PhysDes: xxiv, 208 p. ; 24 cmSeries: Routledge advances in Asia-Pacific studies ; 15Subject: ASIAN COUNTRIES ; CENSORSHIP ; LAW AND THE CINEMA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: "Film censorship has always been a controversial matter, particularly in jurisdictions with restrictive state-based censorship systems. This book reviews the film censorship system in the Asia-Pacific by comparing the systems used in Malaysia, Hong Kong and Australia. It identifies the key issues and concerns that arise from the design and implementation of the system by examining the censorship laws, policies, guidelines and processes. The book evaluates film practitioners' and censors' opinion of, and experience in, dealing with those issues, and goes on to develop reform proposals for the film censorship system."--publisher website.Notes: Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN: 9780415656894Contents: -- introduction -- The film industries in Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Australia in their socio-legal context -- Film censorship systems in Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Australia : the laws, guidelines, and processes -- Film censorship systems in Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Australia : the key issues -- Film censorship systems in Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Australia : the practitioners' opinions and experiences -- Judicial review of film censorship decisions -- Conclusion : proposals for the reform of the Malaysian film censorship system and further research -- notes -- bibliography -- index --
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Film Victoria : the second reading speech on the Film Victoria Bill presented to the Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of Victoria by the Hon. Norman Lacy, M.P., Minister for the Arts and Minister of Educational Services, 6 October 1981 / Film Victoria [Australia]: [Film Victoria?], 6 October 1981.
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Guide to pay TV anti-siphoning provisions / Australian Broadcasting Authority Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Authority, 1996.
Call No: 303.333(94) AUSAuthor: Australian Broadcasting Authority Source: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: Australian Broadcasting AuthorityPubDate: 1996PhysDes: 31 pages ; 30 cmSubject: PAY TV. AUSTRALIA ; AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING AUTHORITY ; TELEVISION. AUSTRALIA ; BROADCASTING RIGHTS. AUSTRALIA ; BROADCASTING. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; LICENSING LAWS. AUSTRALIA ; SPORT AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; SPORT ON TV. AUSTRALIA Summary: "This guide provides an overview of anti-siphoning provisions contained in the [Broadcasting Services] Act and outlines a number of issues which have arisen since the anti-siphoning list came into force. The Act sets out the rules that are designed to prevent 'siphoning' of certain programs broadcast on national and commercial television (free-to-air television) and gives particular powers to the ABA and to the Minister in relation to the operation of these rules. Siphoning means the obtaining by a pay TV licensee of the exclusive rights (i.e. both free-to-air and pay TV rights) to broadcast an event (or events), such that those events could not be received on free-to-air television and would only be available to subscribers of the pay TV service. Without fettering the Minister's discretion to exercise his powers, this guide indicates how the ABA will approach certain situations. The ABA hopes this will provide guidance to parties wishing to negotiate rights to events that may be broadcast on Australian free-to-air or pay-tv services." - IntroductionContents: Definitions -- Development of guidelines -- Introduction -- Anti-siphoning provisions -- Role of the ABA -- Role of the minister -- Limitations of anti-siphoning list in the case of newly created events -- Other issues arising from the operation of the anti-siphoning list -- Attachements: anti-siphoning list and amendments; extracts Broadcasting Services Act 1992; Directions to the ABA; Consideration of terms and phrases contained in section 115 examples
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Guidelines for 'new Australian drama' on pay TV / Australian Broadcasting Authority Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Authority, 1996.
Call No: 43(94) AUSSource: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: Australian Broadcasting AuthorityPubDate: 1996PhysDes: 46 pages ; 30x21Subject: PAY TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; STATE AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; DRAMAS. AUSTRALIA Contents: Overview -- Part 1: the 'new Australian drama' licence condition -- purpose of Section 102 -- review of Australian content on pay TV -- explanation of terms -- enforcement of licence conditions -- Part 2: measuring the obligation -- Pay TV - a background -- Pay TV models - measuring the obligation -- Model 1: channels provided by overseas program suppliers -- Model 2: Channels obtained from domestic channel providers -- Model 3: Channels produced by pay TV licensees or broadcasters -- Measuring the obligation over the financial year -- program expenditure -- franchised predominantly drama services -- reporting -- Part 3: assessing whether the obligation has been met -- Australian drama programs -- pooling expenditure -- minimum annual requirement on each channel - no offsetting -- time-frame for expenditure -- Pay TV models - expenditure on new Australian drama -- Model 1: Channels provided by overseas program suppliers -- Model 2: channels obtained from domestic channel providers -- Model 3: channels produced by pay TV licensees or broadcasters -- Reporting -- Appendices
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subject clippings file
LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA
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Levy Collection
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Outside interference : The politics of Australian broadcasting / Richard Harding Melbourne: Sun Books, 1979.
Call No: 19AUS HARAuthor: Harding, Richard Source: ATPlace: MelbournePublisher: Sun BooksPubDate: 1979PhysDes: viii, 219 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmSubject: AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING COMMISSION ; Australian Broadcasting Tribunal ; BROADCASTING. AUSTRALIA ; ECONOMICS AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; PROGRAMME COMPLAINTS ; PROGRAMME CONTENT. AUSTRALIA ; PUBLIC BROADCASTING. AUSTRALIA ; RADIO AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; SPORT ON TV. AUSTRALIA ; STATE AND THE MEDIA. AUSTRALIA ; STATE AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; TELEVISION. AUSTRALIA ; FRASER, MALCOLM ; GYNGELL, BRUCE ; PACKER, KERRY ; ALVIN PURPLE (AT, Tim Burstall, 1973) Summary: "In recent years the Australian Broadcasting Commission has been racked with storm and strife. The public mud-slinging and political gesturing that has kept it in the news have been accompanied by the simmering background of internal wars that affect the media monolith. Professor Richard Harding has been a man inside the ABC - among the men with the hottest seats and the best views of the bloody circus, the Commissioners. His brilliant observation of the events that have occurred in his time at the ABC gives a fresh insight into many of the issues that made headlines - the Bland affair, the staff commissioner, the continuing crisis and cries of "bias" in current affairs programmes, 2JJ and access radio, FM, the department of the media, the sports coverage tangle, etc. The effects of politics and government funding on the Australian Broadcasting Commission, and the role of the ABC as an opinion maker are seen in a realistic light from the centre of affairs." - BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes bibliographic references and indexISBN: 0725103159Donation: donated by the family of Wayne Levy, 2006
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Proposed moral rights legislation for copyright creators Canberra: [Australian Government Publishing Service], 1994.
Call No: 432.4(94) PROSource: ATPlace: CanberraPublisher: [Australian Government Publishing Service]PubDate: 1994PhysDes: 78 p. ; 25 cmSubject: AUTHORSHIP. AUSTRALIA ; COPYRIGHT. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; PIRACY. AUSTRALIA Summary: "This paper sets out the background to moral rights and the present forms of protection in Australia and examines Australia's legal obligations under the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. It also outlines the majority and minority recommendations of the Copyright Law Review Committee in its 1988 Report on Moral Rights, developments in Australia since the Report, the particular problems of Aboriginal artists, and comparisons of legislation in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada and France. The impact of new technology is also addressed. It then outlines a possible moral rights legislative regime for Australia in respect to each of the relevant categories of copyright creators covered by the Berne Convention. In summary, the proposed scheme would involve an amendment to the Copyright Act to accord relevant copyright creators the right of attribution and the right of integrity." - FROM INTRODUCTIONNotes: At head of title: Discussion paper -- "Prepared by officers in the Attorney-General's Department, in conjunction with officers in the Department of Communications and the Arts"ISBN: 0642208107
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Report and recommendations to the Minister for the Media on the inquiry into the coverage by commercial television stations of the report of the Joint Committee on Prices entitled Prices of household soaps and detergents, and other matters / Australian Broadcasting Control Board [Melbourne]: Australian Broadcasting Control Board, 1975.
Call No: 411.213(94) AUSAuthor: Australian Broadcasting Control Board Source: ATPlace: [Melbourne]Publisher: Australian Broadcasting Control BoardPubDate: 1975PhysDes: 23 p. ; 25 cmSubject: ADVERTISING. TV. AUSTRALIA ; COMMERCIAL TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: Report detailing an inquiry into whether any commercial television stations "refused, failed or neglected, contrary to the best interests of the public" to publicly broadcast information regarding the report by the Joint Committee on PricesNotes: Place of publication sourced from Trove
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book
Sex, violence & offensive language : community views on classification of TV programs / by Kathryn Paterson and Milica Loncar North Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, 1991.
Call No: 440(94) PATAuthor: Paterson, Kathryn ; Loncar, Milica CorpAuthor: Australian Broadcasting TribunalSource: ATPlace: North SydneyPublisher: Australian Broadcasting TribunalPubDate: 1991PhysDes: 44 pages ; 25 cmSeries: Research Monograph Series (Australian Broadcasting Tribunal) ; No. 2Subject: AUDIENCE RESEARCH. AUSTRALIA ; AUDIENCE RECEPTION. AUSTRALIA ; BROADCASTING. AUSTRALIA ; CENSORSHIP TV. AUSTRALIA ; CODES OF PRACTICE. AUSTRALIA ; GOVERNMENT CONTROL, TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION FOR CHILDREN. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA ; PORNOGRAPHY ON TV ; RATING FOR TV. AUSTRALIA ; SEX AND TV ; VIOLENCE ON TV. AUSTRALIA Summary: "Program classification issues have long been at the core of a heated public debate focusing on what can be shown on television. Because television is readily accessible to nearly all people of all ages, it is accepted that program standards are required to regulate what we are able to watch on television. However, any government regulation of television programs still raises sensitive issues. On the one hand, there is concern that even the most indirect intrusion into programming can destroy artistic intention and creativity. On the other hand, community opinion indicates that television and broadcasting in general, should maintain certain social objectives [...] This monograph is concerned principally with public attitudes to classification issues: namely, sex, violence and offensive language and knowledge of the classification system" - FROM INTRODUCTIONISBN: 0642168857
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Submission to the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal of the CAD response to the Australian Consumers' Association report on law and self-regulation of advertising 1982 : section 1 of 3 / Federation of Australian and Commercial Television Stations Sydney: Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations, [1982?].
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book
Submission to the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal of the CAD response to the Australian Consumers' Association report on law and self-regulation of advertising 1982 : section 2 of 3 / Federation of Australian and Commercial Television Stations Sydney: Federation of Australian and Commercial Television Stations, [1982?].
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book
Submission to the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal of the CAD response to the Australian Consumers' Association report on law and self-regulation of advertising 1982 : Section 3 of 3 / Federation of Australian and Commercial Television Stations Sydney: Federation of Australian and Commercial Television Stations, [1982?].
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newspaper article
Throw out the old media rule book in Sydney Morning Herald (30/09/2015) p.17
Call No: SUBJECT CLIPPINGS FILE; MEDIA. AUSTRALIA. 2015Author: Taylor, Angus PhysDes: Clippings File ArticleSubject: MEDIA AUSTRALIA ; MEDIA. AUSTRALIA ; STATE AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: Opinion piece by a Federal Member of Parliament, Angus Taylor, who argues for a loosening of the current legislation regarding media ownership and the 'reach rule', claiming that there have been negative effects on regional broadcasting in recent times due to the current rules
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Levy Collection
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Understanding advertising : an Australian guide / Kenneth Fowles and Norman Mills (eds) Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 1981.
Call No: 49[659.1](94) UNDEdition: revised editionSource: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: University of New South Wales PressPubDate: 1981PhysDes: 182 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmSeries: Tafe educational booksSubject: ADVERTISING ; ADVERTISING. AUSTRALIA ; ADVERTISING IN CINEMAS ; COMMERCIALS, TV. AUSTRALIA ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: "Understanding Advertising is a uniquely Australian view of advertising and following the successful first edition, has been expanded and completely revised. It covers a broad range of topics, contributed by acknowledged leaders of the industry, and aims to present in an uncomplicated and readable form, the questions most asked by those who need to understand advertising." -- BOOK BLURBISBN: 086840248Donation: donated by the family of Wayne Levy, 2006Contents: Introduction / Kenneth Fowles -- Advertising: an introduction / Andrew Caro -- Where the money goes / Peter M. Long -- What is an advertising agency? / Christopher Cross -- Who accepts responsibility? / Kevin J. Luscombe -- Deciding how much to spend / Stanley Whittington -- Choosing the medium / Geoffrey Latimer -- Specialised advertising / Jay Shimmin -- Measuring how many read, see or listen / Ian Muir -- What to say / Bruce Harris -- How to say it / Bruce Jarrett -- Producing the advertisement / Brian Ahearn -- Testing the advertisement / D.M. Jones -- What can advertising achieve? / Hugh Mackay
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journal article
Victoria fights for Christmas Day trading in Encore (Jan 28, 1998) vol.15 iss.21 p.8
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newspaper article
Win bails on Free TV group in The Age (02/09/2015) p.26
Call No: SUBJECT CLIPPINGS FILE; WIN CORPORATIONAuthor: Mason, Max PhysDes: Clippings File ArticleSubject: WIN CORPORATION ; FREE TV ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: Report about WIN Corporation leaving the Free TV lobby group over the disagreement within the group's membership about the federal government 'reach rule' legislation and whether it should be changed
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newspaper article
WIN Corporation pulls out of industry lobby group Free TV in Sydney Morning Herald (02/09/2015) p.24
Call No: SUBJECT CLIPPINGS FILE; WIN CORPORATIONAuthor: Mason, Max PhysDes: Clippings File ArticleSubject: FREE TV ; WIN CORPORATION ; LEGISLATION. AUSTRALIA Summary: Report about WIN Corporation leaving the Free TV lobby group over the disagreement within the group's membership about the federal government 'reach rule' legislation and whether it should be changed
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