Australasian Leisure Management
Aug 27, 2012

Strategy for media jobs for Indigenous Australians

Stars of the blockbuster Australian film The Sapphires have joined Federal Arts Minister Simon Crean and Indigenous Employment and Economic Development Minister Julie Collins to launch a new work and training program that will create jobs for Indigenous Australians.
Ministers Crean and Collins last week joined stars Jessica Mauboy and Deborah Mailman at the Parliament House theatre to announce details of Screen Australia's two-year Media RING Indigenous Employment Strategy.
The $1.1 million work and training program will create 40 new jobs for Indigenous Australians in sectors including newspapers, new media, film and television.
Minister Crean explained "The Sapphires was a great example of the incredible Indigenous screen talent in Australia, but more needed to be done to strengthen Indigenous representation in the media sector.
"The new employment program will help train and guide a new generation of Indigenous media professionals, whether they are on screen or in the media.
"Australia is home to the oldest living culture on earth, but it is producing some of the most exciting new art forms on the planet.
"By investing to create new Indigenous employment opportunities in the media and screen industries, we're not only diversifying workplaces, but investing in protecting and sharing our culture with many generations to come.
"This program also reflects the development of our National Cultural Policy, which will be released later this year."
Minister Collins said Screen Australia received $1.1 million through the Federal Government's Indigenous Employment Program to run the employment strategy, adding "the employment strategy was the result of the Review of Australian Government Investment in the Indigenous Broadcasting and Media Sector released last year that recommended establishing an Indigenous employment strategy for the industry.
"The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations has worked with Media RING and its members from the outset to make this strategy a reality.
"In the past decade there has not been a consistent critical mass of Indigenous people trained to work in the media industries.
"Previous training placements and programs nurtured and trained many of the key Indigenous journalists and screen practitioners we see today, but a number of these programs have since been discontinued.
"The initiative will create more diverse workplaces that present a more accurate picture of Australia today."
Media RING is an industry body encompassing more than 40 broadcasters, government media agencies, Indigenous organisations, trade associations, media buyers and newspaper groups. Current members include the ABC, SBS, FOXTEL and News Limited.
Chair of Media RING Susanne Larson said the strength of the strategy is signified by the diverse opportunities on offer from film and television to newspapers and new media.
Larson concluded "the strategy will include tailored training for each individual, and will look at the long-term growth of the sector, beginning in schools and including workplace culture and mentoring."
The Sapphires is a film inspired by the true story of an all-girl Aboriginal group sent to Vietnam to entertain the troops in 1968.

http://www.screenaustralia.gov.au

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