Australia

Submission

Response to the exposure draft of the News Media Bargaining (Administration) Act 2026


This submission addresses draft Australian legislation establishing a News Bargaining Incentive, prepared by University of Canberra and RMIT researchers. Drawing on extensive regional interviews, national surveys, and stakeholder engagement, it proposes five recommendations: include AI platforms, strengthen incentives for smaller publishers, raise agreement thresholds, require multi-year deals, and enhance transparency to support public interest journalism.
Survey Report

Social media ban: the impact on young people’s news engagement


This report is based on a representative survey of Australians aged 10 to 17 conducted in February 2026. It examines the impact of Australia's teen social media ban on young people’s news engagement, just two months after the legislation took effect. As the ban affects more young people, it finds that their news engagement will...
Report

Community radio and Australian music: building the music media eco-system

Sarah Hellyer, Nat Kassel, Eric Mclean

This research reports on the contribution of community radio to the Australian music industries. The sector's role in providing airplay and promotion for new and emerging artists is significant. The research finds that community radio contributes about $153 million in net value to the Australian music industries every year.
Submission

Response to the News Bargaining Incentive Consultation on Revenue Distribution


This submission responds to News Bargaining Incentive Revenue Distribution—Statutory Payment Scheme (“the NBI scheme”). Informed by regional interviews, surveys, and stakeholder engagement, it offers seven recommendations: strengthen eligibility, support workforce sustainability, improve funding allocation, broaden journalism roles, establish evaluation mechanisms, reduce regulatory burden for small publishers, and ensure transparency and accountability.
Report

Access denied: the twin threat to innovative medicines availability in Australia and the impact on patient access


The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) is crucial to the health of Australian citizens. However, despite its strengths, the PBS is not keeping pace with global medical innovation. As a result, Australian patients are missing out on access to innovative medicines. This report presents a challenging picture and reinforces an urgent need to act.
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