The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities

In becoming a part of Australia’s multicultural community, members of ethnic minorities need to communicate and stay connected with their friends, family and others in Australia in order to ensure their community cohesion. In the 1990s, mobile devices in turn underwent another major technological in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Natcha Krisneepaiboon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athens Institute for Education and Research 2015-01-01
Series:Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
Online Access:http://www.atiner.gr/journals/media/2015-1-1-5-Krisneepaiboon.pdf
id doaj-0abd6e44ee154705b2606a2b50bb4005
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0abd6e44ee154705b2606a2b50bb40052021-02-25T10:33:11ZengAthens Institute for Education and ResearchAthens Journal of Mass Media and Communications2407-94992015-01-01117182The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities Natcha Krisneepaiboon010.30958/ajmmc.1-1-5In becoming a part of Australia’s multicultural community, members of ethnic minorities need to communicate and stay connected with their friends, family and others in Australia in order to ensure their community cohesion. In the 1990s, mobile devices in turn underwent another major technological innovation—access to the internet. Mobile device users can access the internet much more conveniently than ever before. Communication via mobile devices has become one of the most common ways through which minority people are empowered to sustain and constitute their community connections today. This Higher Degree research mainly focuses on new media use (the mobile internet) amongst Australia’s multicultural communities. It aims to better understand the ways in which various ethnic community groups communicate via mobile devices. First, the project explores whether communities are using these technologies to sustain and constitute their community connections and cultures. Secondly, it investigates what broader impact this communication technology is having on minority communities in Australia. Three minority communities — Thai, Rohingya and Hmong — are the subjects of research. The ultimate goal is to find ways to help policymakers to assist ethnic minorities to live their life in a multicultural country like Australia. The project employed a case study methodology as the main research approach which also includes the application of Ethnographic Action Research (EAR). This approach will allow the research questions or issues to be explored more deeply and contextually through the real experiences of the selected community participants and their particular cultural environments.http://www.atiner.gr/journals/media/2015-1-1-5-Krisneepaiboon.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natcha Krisneepaiboon
spellingShingle Natcha Krisneepaiboon
The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
author_facet Natcha Krisneepaiboon
author_sort Natcha Krisneepaiboon
title The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
title_short The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
title_full The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
title_fullStr The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
title_full_unstemmed The Role of New Media in Multicultural Australia: A Study of Thai,Rohingya and Hmong Communities
title_sort role of new media in multicultural australia: a study of thai,rohingya and hmong communities
publisher Athens Institute for Education and Research
series Athens Journal of Mass Media and Communications
issn 2407-9499
publishDate 2015-01-01
description In becoming a part of Australia’s multicultural community, members of ethnic minorities need to communicate and stay connected with their friends, family and others in Australia in order to ensure their community cohesion. In the 1990s, mobile devices in turn underwent another major technological innovation—access to the internet. Mobile device users can access the internet much more conveniently than ever before. Communication via mobile devices has become one of the most common ways through which minority people are empowered to sustain and constitute their community connections today. This Higher Degree research mainly focuses on new media use (the mobile internet) amongst Australia’s multicultural communities. It aims to better understand the ways in which various ethnic community groups communicate via mobile devices. First, the project explores whether communities are using these technologies to sustain and constitute their community connections and cultures. Secondly, it investigates what broader impact this communication technology is having on minority communities in Australia. Three minority communities — Thai, Rohingya and Hmong — are the subjects of research. The ultimate goal is to find ways to help policymakers to assist ethnic minorities to live their life in a multicultural country like Australia. The project employed a case study methodology as the main research approach which also includes the application of Ethnographic Action Research (EAR). This approach will allow the research questions or issues to be explored more deeply and contextually through the real experiences of the selected community participants and their particular cultural environments.
url http://www.atiner.gr/journals/media/2015-1-1-5-Krisneepaiboon.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT natchakrisneepaiboon theroleofnewmediainmulticulturalaustraliaastudyofthairohingyaandhmongcommunities
AT natchakrisneepaiboon roleofnewmediainmulticulturalaustraliaastudyofthairohingyaandhmongcommunities
_version_ 1724251594766155776