Angus McCormack
Burnet Institute
10 Papers
34 Citations
Angus McCormack is an academic researcher from Burnet Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: News media & Journalism. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Angus McCormack include University of Melbourne & Deakin University.
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Papers
•Posted Content
Media Guidelines for the Responsible Reporting of Violence Against Women: A Review of Evidence and Issues
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the expanding body of evidence concerning portrayals of violence against women in the news media and review the content of a selection of international media reporting guidelines developed to address such concerns.
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Aiming for elimination: Outcomes of a consultation pathway supporting regional general practitioners to prescribe direct‐acting antiviral therapy for hepatitis C
Amanda Wade,Amanda Wade,Amanda Wade,Angus McCormack,Christine Roder,K. McDonald,M. Davies,M. Davies,Nick Scott,M. Wardrop,Eugene Athan,Eugene Athan,Margaret Hellard,Margaret Hellard +13 more
TL;DR: Collaborative development and implementation of a remote consultation pathway has engaged regional GPs in managing HCV and follow‐up post‐treatment could be improved; however, no treatment failure has been documented.
•Journal Article
Media guidelines for the responsible reporting of violence against women: a review of evidence and issues
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the expanding body of evidence concerning portrayals of violence against women in the news media and review the content of a selection of international media reporting guidelines developed to address such concerns.
31
Media representations of violence against women and their children: state of knowledge paper
Georgina Sutherland,Angus McCormack,Jane Pirkis,Patricia L. Easteal,Kate Holland,Cathy Vaughan +5 more
- 24 Nov 2015
TL;DR: This paper provided an overview of the best available contemporary evidence on the way news and information media portray violence against women and their children and found that the media frequently mirrors society's confusion and ambivalence about violence in women.
Media representations of violence against women and their children: final report
Georgina Sutherland,Angus McCormack,Jane Pirkis,Cathy Vaughan,Michelle Dunne Breen,Patricia L. Easteal,Kate Holland +6 more
- 06 Jun 2016
TL;DR: This article found that the vast majority of reporting on violence against women was "incident-based", looking at tragic individual instances, but not exploring the issue in a more depth, and that the lack of social context in reporting, and thereby the broader public's understanding of the issue, could be improved by the inclusion of more expert sources, including domestic violence advocates and those with lived experience of violence.
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