Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism

As television moves beyond digital broadcast modes of distribution towards online modes of delivery, this paper considers the opportunities and challenges for people with disabilities. With accessibility relying on a complex mix of regulation, legislation and industry innovation, the paper questions...

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Main Authors: Ellis, Katie, Kent, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31327
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author Ellis, Katie
Kent, Michael
author_facet Ellis, Katie
Kent, Michael
author_sort Ellis, Katie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description As television moves beyond digital broadcast modes of distribution towards online modes of delivery, this paper considers the opportunities and challenges for people with disabilities. With accessibility relying on a complex mix of regulation, legislation and industry innovation, the paper questions whether predictions of improved accessibility are an automatic outcome of new television technologies. The paper asks 'where to next?' for disability and the Internet through an emphasis on the importance of television in an accessible new media environment. The paper draws on government policies, the activist intervention of a number of people with disabilities as documented online, and primary research into Australian television audiences with disabilities that took place in 2013 and 2014.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-313272017-09-13T15:20:01Z Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism Ellis, Katie Kent, Michael As television moves beyond digital broadcast modes of distribution towards online modes of delivery, this paper considers the opportunities and challenges for people with disabilities. With accessibility relying on a complex mix of regulation, legislation and industry innovation, the paper questions whether predictions of improved accessibility are an automatic outcome of new television technologies. The paper asks 'where to next?' for disability and the Internet through an emphasis on the importance of television in an accessible new media environment. The paper draws on government policies, the activist intervention of a number of people with disabilities as documented online, and primary research into Australian television audiences with disabilities that took place in 2013 and 2014. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31327 10.5210/fm.v20i9.6170 fulltext
spellingShingle Ellis, Katie
Kent, Michael
Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title_full Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title_fullStr Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title_full_unstemmed Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title_short Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
title_sort accessible television: the new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31327