The political independence of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Abstract
The Australlan Broadcasting Corporation, created in 1932 and
reconstructed in 1983. is a public-fundod national broadcasting
organisation. It was estabilshed to provide a oomprehensive,
innovative and impartial radio and television service for all
Australians.
The ABC is a statutory corporation. intended to be accountable
to Parliament for it's actions, but independent of the government of
the day. Controversy about ABC news and current affairs
serv1ces, about whether Corporation programs are obective,
impartial, balanced and free from political interference, is a hardy
perenial of Australian public life. The ABC'c public credibility
depends on its perceived ability to function without government
influence over program content.
The ABC does not operate in isolation. It must negotiate for
finance and resources with a federal bureaucracy 11nd conform to
standards of accountability set by Parliament. Corporation claims
to independence cannot be assessed in absolute terms, but must
be viewed within its setting in a world of complex interaction
between Parliament, the government and the Corporation.
Within this framework, ABC independence must be viewed in
two arenas - the administrative independence of the organisation to
control and aliocate Its resources, and function a/ Independence to
make program judgements without outside interference. This
dissertation examines both dimensions of the contemporary ABC.
Through institutional analysis it seeks to determine whether the ABC
in practice enjoys the independence which in theory is guaranteed
by its legislative form.
The thesis opens with a discussion of the theoretlcal
assumptions underlylng the ABC and a description of the
organisation's environment: the origins of the ABC in the ideology
of pubiic service broadcasting, Its place in the Australian
broadcasting system and its relationship with governments and the
Public Service. It is argued that the precise objectives and aims
of the ABC have never been clear. that a lack of agreed goals
makes it difficult for the organisation to win public aupport against
governmental intervention in ABC administration, and that the
structure of the Australian broadcasting system enables commercial media rivals to lobby governments to restrict the ABC to marginal
activities.
ABC decision-making is then examined: the influence of the
ABC's legislative basis, structure, the role of the Board of
Directors, ABC management, the internal allocation of resources
and the work environment. The focus is on the relative
involvemont of directors and managers on ABC output; it is argued
that structural impediments limit the influence Directors can
exercise over Corporation policy, while confused lines of
responsibility, the structure of the organisation and the production
process make it difficult for ABC managers to tightly control
program output.
With the external and internal context established, the
production of ABC news and current affairs programs and the
political control of ABC resources are examined. The study
concludes with an assessment of whether the rhetoric of an
independent but accountable ABC is realised, or whether the
Corporation is part of the general machinery of government, with
its independence a convenient fiction.
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