ABC operations

ABC champions Southeast Asian emerging media leaders with new Future Voices program

Posted 2h ago2 hours ago

ABC International’s media development unit, ABC International Development (ABCID), has launched an innovative three-year program called Future Voices,offering hands-on leadership and digital journalism training to Southeast Asia’s next generation of media leaders.

The program’s launch coincides with Australia hosting the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Women’s Asian Cup and some participants are spending two-weeks in Brisbane and the Gold Coast where they will receive on-the-ground mentoring and mobile journalism training at matches and earn a micro-credential in Leadership and Sports Diplomacy at Griffith University.

ABC International Head Claire M. Gorman said, “We are proud to launch this significant new program, leveraging the ABC’s expertise in building and managing independent, ethical and inclusive newsrooms and sharing these skills with our colleagues across the region. Future Voices will strengthen Australian connections with Asia, building meaningful relationships with and between the region’s media organisations and this year, championing female participation in news and sports media.”

ABCID Manager Jo Elsom said the new program will equip young media professionals with a suite of practical reporting skills, strengthening their capacity to elevate coverage of cultural and sporting events in their own countries.

“Program graduates will have the unique opportunity to practice commentary, interviews, and match-day reporting in real time at a major international women’s sporting event, developing high-quality, multi-platform sport content in a fast-paced environment. Combined with their course at Griffith University, they will return to their media organisations with important new leadership and management skills.”

“It’s critical that we continue enhancing the capability of our media leaders across our region, to encourage diverse and independent reporting – Future Voices gives journalists from across our region such a wonderful opportunity to build connections and deepen their skills.

Head of the ASEAN-Australia Centre, Fiona Hoggart said the Centre is dedicated to championing initiatives like Future Voices that build capability and deepen Australia’s connections with Southeast Asia.

“The ASEAN-Australia Centre is proud to support such a valuable program,” Ms Hoggart said. “Future Voices not only strengthens our partnerships in Southeast Asia, it gives young journalists the chance to build practical skills and supports quality reporting across our region as Australia hosts the Women’s Asian Cup.

“Participants will form relationships with colleagues from across Australia and Southeast Asia that will last for years to come.”

Griffith University Pro Vice-Chancellor Professor Caitlin Byrne AM said, “Griffith University is committed to supporting a strong and vibrant media landscape across the Asia–Pacific. We are delighted to partner with the ABC to equip sports journalists from the region with the skills and confidence to lead informed, meaningful public discourse within a rapidly evolving media environment.”

Future Voices aims to deepen Australia’s regional connections and foster a peaceful, prosperous Southeast Asia, with a new cohort entering the program each year, and is supported by the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s ASEAN-Australia Centre.

The ABC is bracing for a possible 24-hour strike on Wednesday that threatens to interrupt TV and radio news bulletins as well as the ABC News digital site. Last month the Fair Work Commission approved an application from the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance for what would be the first ABC strike in 20 years.

Time to dust this off…

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Presume they’d just run Christmas Day style prerecorded programs all day?

ABC staff expected to strike after latest pay agreement falls through

Thousands of ABC staff are expected to down tools and walk off the job on Wednesday following the collapse of pay negotiations with management.

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They’d have links for the news channel, they’d probably patch in DW. Local Radio is a whole different story though

The ABC and their multichannels will be a very interesting watch come Wednesday. :popcorn:

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i expect newsradio to carry the world service all day like christmas

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Likely anyone who isn’t on strike will help run a national schedule

Also other staff in the newsroom who are in that category would work on a national 7pm news

ABC staff have voted overwhelmingly in favour of protected industrial action – including a 24-hour strike planned to commence at 11am AEDT on Wed 25 March – in a bid to secure sustainable jobs, fair pay and improved working conditions, and to protect the quality news and programming Australians rely on.

Close to 1,000 staff participated in the ballot, with over 90 per cent voting in favour of industrial action. The approved actions also include unlimited stoppages of work, with exemptions in place to ensure emergency broadcasting continues.

Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance Chief Executive, Erin Madeley, said the decision reflected deep frustration after months of negotiations with ABC management.

From the other union that represents ABC employees

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or this:

IF the ABC were smart - get someone else externally to produce a 7pm bulletin for them instead of repeat wasteland.

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Well it’s not Wednesday yet …

Has happened to SBS

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Can you imagine the look on people’s faces when they flick through all the ABC channels and they showed a test pattern like this on all of them. :winking_face_with_tongue:

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Should really only be ABC News & ABC TV affected
ABC Kids is easy to program and ABC Entertains is repeats or just make it ABC Big Kids all day

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The entire ABC radio network will be affected. For a start, current affairs show like The World Today, PM, Country Hour and AM won’t be broadcast during the strike.

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ABC has released programming for Wednesday for the main channel.

Does anyone think that they would combine Radio services during the 24 hour strike, ala BBC in December 1978 when they combined their then four Radio services into a single national service or would it be the normal structure but notified.

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I agree, the ABC did this with a strike back in 1991 or thereabouts when the same program was broadcast on all 5 networks.