Abstract
Journalism has both contributed to shaping and been shaped by colonialism and has reproduced the status quo at the expense of those on the margins. Considering this reality, this study explores how journalism education and practice can be unlearned through a decolonising, Indigenous standpoint. It does this through an Indigenous co-led approach that brings together journalism students, journalism academics, and working journalists with family connections to, or extensive experience working with, 10 distinct Indigenous people groups. The participants provided provocations to journalists interested in unlearning the standard way that journalism is learned and practised.
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Patrick, R., McLaughlin, J., King-Smith, L., Schultz, T., Thomson, T. J., & Dezuanni, M. (2026). Unlearning journalism through decolonising, Indigenous approaches. Journalism, 27(2), 310–329. https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849241305363
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