id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-240914-7kfo61da Dawson, Nik Layoffs, Inequity and COVID-19: A Longitudinal Study of the Journalism Jobs Crisis in Australia from 2012 to 2020 2020-08-28 .txt text/plain 10942 667 56 We can also tease out more granular findings, including: that there are now more women than men journalists in Australia, but that gender inequity is worsening, with women journalists getting younger and worse-paid just as men journalists are, on average, getting older and better-paid; that, despite the crisis besetting the industry, the demand for journalism skills has increased; and that the skills sought by journalism job ads increasingly include social media and generalist communications. • providing a comprehensive and longitudinal assessment of journalism jobs in Australia from 2012 to 2020 by analysing both job ads data and occupational employment statistics; The ACCC cited Census data showing that 'from 2006 to 2016, the number of Australians in journalism-related occupations fell by 9% overall, and by 26% for traditional print journalists (including those journalists working for print/online news media businesses)'. In the present research, in Jobs Data Analysis and Results, we use a similar set of indicators to analyse labour demand for journalists. ./cache/cord-240914-7kfo61da.txt ./txt/cord-240914-7kfo61da.txt