The University of Liverpool is one of the top UK universities, member of the prestigious Russell Group of 24 leading UK universities.
The Worlds of Journalism Study is a cross-national collaborative project assessing the state of journalism in the world through representative surveys with journalists.
UNESCO is the lead UN Agency for promoting freedom of expression and safety of journalists as part of its mandate to “promote the free flow of ideas by word and image”.
Associate Professor at Southern Illinois University Carbondale
media reform alternative journalism precarity human rights affect and trauma in journalism media policy
My research focuses on journalists working in authoritarian contexts -- specifically in Myanmar, the Philippines and Thailand -- who often find themselves under attack. I am interested in the efforts of those journalists and advocacy groups to improve the media landscapes in their countries and similar contexts, and focus especially on those journalists and media change advocates working to make the practice of journalism safer. Many of those I work with are journalists in the alternative media, or smaller, non-state, non-commercial outlets focused on public service, although some also work for major outlets. In the contexts in which I work, much of the hard-hitting investigative reporting, and the outlets that delve into a country's most difficult issues, are found in the alternative media sector. For this reason, these media are often targeted. Their journalists are the victims of varying degrees of trauma, from harassment to death threats to death itself (red-tagging in the Philippines, forced disappearances and self-censorship in Thailand, outright attack in Myanmar). My work looks at the constraints and opportunities facing these journalists, and the strategies they and their allies use to continue their work, often despite being targeted, in precarious contexts.