AppletonG., How Australia Sees Itself: The Role of Commercial Television, Australian Broadcasting Tribunal Australian Content Inquiry Discussion Paper, May 1988.
2.
Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, Australian Content Proposal for Commercial Television, December 1988.
3.
Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, Television Program Standard 14, Australian Content on Commercial Television, November 1989.
4.
Australian Manufacturing Council, The Global Challenge, AGPS Canberra1990. BowmanD., The Captive Press, Penguin, Melbourne, 1989.
5.
BryanR., ‘Xenophobia or Theory Phobia: Economic Nationalism and the Question of Foreign Investment’, Australian Outlook, Vol 37, 2.
6.
CastlesS.KalantzisM.CopeB.MorrisseyM., Mistaken Identity: Multiculturalism and the Demise of Nationalism in Australia, Pluto Press, Sydney1988.
7.
ChadwickP., Media MatesSun, Melbourne, 1989.
8.
CraikJ., ‘Popular, Commercial and National Imperatives of Australian Broadcasting’, Media Information Australia, No. 59, February 1991.
9.
CunninghamS., ‘Figuring the Australian Factor’, Culture and Policy, Vol. 2, No. 1, 1990.
10.
DockerJ., ‘Popular Culture versus the Sute: An Argument Against Australian Content Regulations for Television’, Media Information AustraliaNo. 59, February 1991.
11.
GrossbergL., ‘It's a Sin: Politics, Post-Modernity and the Popular’, in GrossbergIt's a Sin, Power Publications, Sydney, 1988.
12.
HallS., ‘Brave New World’, Marxism Today, November 1988.
13.
JackaE., ‘The Imaginary Industry’, in DermodyS.JackaE. (eds), The Imaginary Industry: Australian Film in the Late 1980s, Media Information Australia, No. 50, November 1988.
14.
JenkinsR., Transnational Corporations and Uneven Development, Macmillan, London, 1987.
15.
KirkwoodJ., in ‘Forum: Foreign Ownership of Media’, Communications Law Bulletin, Vol. 10No. 3, Spring 1990.
16.
LashS.UrryJ., The End of Organised Capitalism, Polity Press, Oxford, 1987).