A small radical fringe element within the Australian Muslim community engages in provocative and sometimes violent protests, damaging the image of Muslims. These fringe groups like Al-Furqan and Hizb ut-Tahrir involve only a few dozen or hundred people but receive disproportionate media attention. Mainstream Muslim leaders work closely with police to address extremism and support rehabilitation efforts, demonstrating that Australian Muslims are well integrated and do not widely support extremist views.
Trial attorney Beth Klein has led her team at Klein Frank PC to many successful battles in the courts of law. However, this Boulder, Colorado-based attorney is not only passionate about defending her clients. Attorney Beth Klein also serves as president of Klein Frank Foundation. The Boulder-based foundation leads the fight against human trafficking.
Comments on Friday December 27, 2019 PBS NewsHour broadcastJulieBinderMaitra1
I am writing with respect to the segment on What ongoing Indian protests say about the country’s secular identity on your Friday, September 27, 2019 broadcast. I have copied Alyssa Ayres, whom Lisa Desjardins interviewed for this segment, on this email.
Trial attorney Beth Klein has led her team at Klein Frank PC to many successful battles in the courts of law. However, this Boulder, Colorado-based attorney is not only passionate about defending her clients. Attorney Beth Klein also serves as president of Klein Frank Foundation. The Boulder-based foundation leads the fight against human trafficking.
Comments on Friday December 27, 2019 PBS NewsHour broadcastJulieBinderMaitra1
I am writing with respect to the segment on What ongoing Indian protests say about the country’s secular identity on your Friday, September 27, 2019 broadcast. I have copied Alyssa Ayres, whom Lisa Desjardins interviewed for this segment, on this email.
Information prepared by Angela Clarke, Brian Gregory and Christina Hayden as part of a Development Education project undertaken for a Postgraduate Masters in Art & Design Education at NCAD, Dublin, Ireland
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Sponsors Light the Night WalkJohn W. Pacheco
As founder and chief executive officer of Financial American Corporation in Scottsdale, Arizona, John Pacheco has led the firm in its acquisition of thousands of properties. On behalf of his company, John Pacheco supports several nonprofit organizations, one of which is the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS).
This lesson will:
• Explain how moral integrity can be maintained in the midst of economic development.
• Show that the downfall of civilizations can be correlated to selfishness and sexual immorality.
• Detail why it is the foremost obligation of a nation to protect and promote the family.
• Encourage everyone to participate in building a world of sustainable peace and mutual prosperity.
Information prepared by Angela Clarke, Brian Gregory and Christina Hayden as part of a Development Education project undertaken for a Postgraduate Masters in Art & Design Education at NCAD, Dublin, Ireland
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Sponsors Light the Night WalkJohn W. Pacheco
As founder and chief executive officer of Financial American Corporation in Scottsdale, Arizona, John Pacheco has led the firm in its acquisition of thousands of properties. On behalf of his company, John Pacheco supports several nonprofit organizations, one of which is the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS).
This lesson will:
• Explain how moral integrity can be maintained in the midst of economic development.
• Show that the downfall of civilizations can be correlated to selfishness and sexual immorality.
• Detail why it is the foremost obligation of a nation to protect and promote the family.
• Encourage everyone to participate in building a world of sustainable peace and mutual prosperity.
The Representation of Islam and Muslims in the Media .docxoreo10
The Representation of Islam and Muslims
in the Media
(The Age and Herald Sun Newspapers)
Dr Shahram Akbarzadeh and Dr Bianca Smith
School of Political and Social Inquiry
November 2005
Islam in the Media 2
Acknowledgements
This report was made possible by the generous sponsorship of The Myer
Foundation. The authors would also like to acknowledge Dr Pete Lentini
and Dr Rod Ling for their extensive support and encouragement.
Islam in the Media 3
Contents
I. Introduction 1
II. Background 2
III. Previous Studies 4
III.a. Constructing the Muslim Other 4
III.b. Racism and Public Attitude 5
III.c. Media and Journalists as Image Makers 6
III.d. International and Domestic Reporting 7
IV. Methodology 8
V. Research Findings 10
V.a. Quantitative Analysis 10
V.a.1. Negative Stories/Reporting 14
V.a.2. Examples 15
V.b. Qualitative Analysis 20
V.b.1. Language 21
V.b.2. Dominant Themes 23
1. Terrorism 23
2. Race 26
3. Gender 30
4. International and Domestic Events 33
V.b.3. Positive Counter-Constructions 35
VI. Conclusion 36
VII. Works Cited 38
Islam in the Media 1
I. Introduction
The media is a significant social agent, with the potential to influence community
perceptions. Its influence can seriously impact on minority groups by subjecting them to
exclusionary pressures by implying that they hold ‘alien’ characteristics which do not
correspond with the values and ethos of mainstream Australia. This report explores how
the print media in Victoria represents Muslims and Islam in news stories since September
11, 2001 until December 31, 2004. The report examines the extent to which negative
images of Islam are reproduced in the pages of The Age and Herald Sun newspapers.
This report is concerned with the type of language these newspapers employ to describe
Muslims and Islam; whether or not this language changes in response to major events;
the frequency of coverage in relation to major events; if journalists explore the diversity
of Islam and Muslim cultures by highlighting nationality, ethnicity, cultural practice, and
theological differences; and the typology used to categorise certain groups, practices or
modes of Islam. The aim is to gain an understanding of the ways in which the media
plays a role in shaping perceptions on Muslims and Islam in the broader community and
how they do so in response to particular events either at home or abroad. The following ...
1. 21/03/2016 2:38 pmFringe groups sully image of Muslim world
Page 1 of 2http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-opinion/fringe-groups-sully-image-of-muslim-world-20120918-264i8.html
'Australian Muslims face some difficult challenges and deserve our support.' Photo: Adam McLean
THE past week has been a difficult time for Australian Muslims. The anniversary of the September 11 attacks brings up troubling memories for
many people, but for Australian Muslims there is the added layer of dealing with the issue of Islam and terrorism and all of the suspicion and
questioning that goes with that.
This was compounded last week with the news of another round of counterterrorism raids on the homes of Muslim families in Melbourne.
As public attention turned to the previously unknown fringe group, the Al-Furqan Centre for Islamic Information in Springvale, we were confronted
again with the unpleasant, but scarcely remarkable, reality that the Muslim community, like most communities, has a radical fringe.
This reality was confirmed with violent protests in Sydney at the weekend in response to the YouTube film trailer for the deliberately antagonistic,
low-budget film The innocence of Muslims.
The shadowy figures behind this film (who include a small-time fraudster, a former producer of pornographic films, and Christian fundamentalists
driven by a deep prejudice against Islam) appeared to have been deliberately seeking to provoke an angry response from Muslims around the
world. By placing the film trailer on YouTube, the makers were engaging in a form of online trolling, seeking an angry reaction that would go viral
online and erupt in the real world.
What happened in Sydney at the weekend is shocking and horrible. As in many other cities around the world, a small number of Muslims sought
to make a public protest about the film. In their midst was an even smaller number of much more belligerent figures who sought to turn the
opportunity of public protest into an occasion for violent confrontation.
Some of those at the heart of this belligerent clique have a history of such confrontations. Others, such as the radical Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir
Australia, seize such moments to be as provocative as possible just short of breaking the law. Their ''Muslims Rise'' conference in Bankstown at
the weekend garnered them the attention that they were seeking.
So what does this mean for Australian Muslims and for Australians in general? Just how well integrated are Australian Muslims and how great is
the support within the community for extremist views?
Monday Mar 21, 2016 26115 online now Do you know more about a story? Real Estate Cars Jobs Dating Newsletters
September 19, 2012 Read later
A small, radical element focuses outside attention in the worst way.
Greg Barton
submit to reddit
Email article Print Reprints & permissions
Fringe groups sully image of Muslim world
Fairfax Media Network
2. 21/03/2016 2:38 pmFringe groups sully image of Muslim world
Page 2 of 2http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-opinion/fringe-groups-sully-image-of-muslim-world-20120918-264i8.html
Recommended Promoted Stories
The facts are relatively clear, but that doesn't mean that they are widely understood. About 480,000 Australians identify as Muslim, with 80 per
cent living in Melbourne and Sydney. As we have been reminded, the community does have a radical fringe. The question is, how large is this
fringe and what sort of relationship does it have with the mainstream majority?
The Al-Furqan centre in Springvale involves several dozen people, mostly young men, who meet regularly at its rented shop-front premises. It has
been shunned by the community from which it split, and its radical position is regarded as completely unacceptable.
Similarly, the Hizb ut-Tahrir protesters at the heart of the violent clashes in Sydney belong to a very small group of people - several hundred at the
core - that thrive on sparking media outrage and solicit the criticism of the wider Muslim community.
This group is widely regarded as an embarrassment to mainstream Muslims and is in no way representative of them.
It is worth remembering here - because we too readily forget - that all of the counterterrorism investigations about Islamist extremists in Australia
have begun with the assistance of Islamic leaders and Muslim community figures, and have relied upon their ongoing support. This was true of
operation Pendennis in 2005, operation Neath in 2009 and the operation behind last week's raids. It is because community leaders speak up
when they have concerns, and because they have sound relationships with police and other authorities, that we have been able to nip in the bud
all of the nascent threats of this kind to Australian society.
Moreover, Muslim community leaders are working hard alongside the police and corrections officials to engage with those who have experienced
trouble and to seek to rehabilitate them, while also working with those at risk.
It is hard to know what more we could ask for. In an ideal world, we wouldn't need police and we certainly wouldn't need counterterrorism
operations.
But in the world in which we live these things are necessary and likely will remain so.
What we need to understand is that in our corner of the world the situation is better when it comes to relations with the communities concerned,
and is more robust and innately healthy, than it is almost anywhere else.
We are not immune as a society from the ills that trouble our global community but, collectively, we are doing a good job of addressing them.
Australian Muslims are at the forefront of this and are dealing with problems as they arise. They face some difficult challenges and they deserve
our support.
Greg Barton is the Herb Feith research professor for the study of Indonesia at Monash University. He is acting director at the Centre for
Islam in the Modern World and a lead researcher at the Global Terrorism Research Centre at Monash.
Follow the National Times on Twitter
Recommended by
An Open Letter To The Person Whose Message I
Didn't…
The Huffington Post Australia
Kyhesha-Lee Joughin died a 'lonely, painful
death'
Queensland
Exhibition reveals 1979 photographs of Madonna
as a…
National
Staying over at boyfriend’s place costs Sydney
woman…
Domain
Glamping on a camping budget…
Kmart
Diet drinks and artifical sweetners… What's the
catch?
LiveLighter
Europe from as little as $129 a day
Brand Discover
Margot Finally Uploads Her First Fitness Vlog
PopSugar Australia
Renovation: Ben Callery
brings light to
Victorian…
Domain
Kim Kardashian posts
new nude selfie, internet
remains…
Daily Life
submit to reddit
Email article Print Reprints & permissions