Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
Dr Caroline Graham
Dr

Caroline Graham

Email: 
Mobile: 
0407374495

Overview

Background

Dr Caroline Graham is an award-winning investigative journalist who specialises in narrative non-fiction storytelling across both traditional and new media formats, including podcasting, data-driven reporting and longform creative non-fiction. Caroline is the co-author of the Australian bestseller Larrimah (Allen & Unwin, 2021), which was shortlisted for an Indie Book Award, Ned Kelly Award and two Davitt Awards. Caroline is also the co-author and co-producer of the investigative true crime podcast series Lost in Larrimah (The Australian, 2018), which won a Walkley Award, an NT Media Award and was a finalist in the Quills Awards and the Australian Podcasting Awards. In addition to writing feature stories and creative non-fiction for a range of publications (including The Australian, The Weekend Australian Magazine and The Guardian), Caroline has co-authored Writing Feature Stories: How to research and write articles, from listicles to longform (Routledge, 2017). She has received a national Office of Learning and Teaching Citation for her approach to teaching data-driven journalism and has co-ordinated student-authored data-driven investigations for The Guardian, Crikey and New Corp Australia. In 2023, she co-wrote/co-produced the ABC Landline documentary Outback Musical, as well as an accompanying multimedia feature that won a Clarion Award. She has also investigated (for The Australian, 2023) access to education in remote parts of the Northern Territory, supported by a Meta/Walkley Foundation grant for public interest journalism. She also writes fiction, has worked as a consulting producer/script editor on podcast series and has written for or collaborated on a number of hybrid new media or cross-platform projects.

Caroline’s academic research interests centre around the application of journalistic ethics and traditions to emerging media formats, including data-driven reporting methodologies, the ethics of true crime podcasting, the evolution of narrative journalism formats, notions of subjectivity in a new-media landscape, regional, rural and remote reporting and the emerging solutions journalism movement. Through her work on the Larrimah projects, she also has an enduring interest in Northern Territory war and rail history, the myth of the outback, small towns, the Australian identity and missing persons cases. She is open to public-interest collaborations with industry or the not-for-profit sector, as well as cross-disciplinary research and practice opportunities.

Availability

Dr Caroline Graham is:
Not available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Journalism, Bond University
  • Bachelor of Arts (International Relations and Asian Politics), Bond University
  • Masters (Research) of Creative Writing, University of Wollongong
  • Doctor of Philosophy of Creative Writing, University of Wollongong

Research interests

  • Narrative non-fiction

    Narrative non-fiction, investigative reporting, longform journalism, podcasting, data-driven reporting.

  • New ethical models for journalism

    Rethinking journalistic ethics in the context of new media formats and genres—from the production of true crime podcasts to data-driven reporting—and the role of the audience in an ethics of consumption.

  • Data-driven reporting

    The context for data-driven journalism, data-driven reporting methodologies, political data-driven reporting, teaching data methodologies.

Works

Search Professor Caroline Graham’s works on UQ eSpace

65 works between 2010 and 2025

61 - 65 of 65 works

2015

Journal Article

By the numbers: data journalism projects as a means of teaching political investigative reporting

Graham, Caroline (2015). By the numbers: data journalism projects as a means of teaching political investigative reporting. Asia Pacific Media Educator, 25 (2), 247-261. doi: 10.1177/1326365x15604936

By the numbers: data journalism projects as a means of teaching political investigative reporting

2013

Journal Article

Shifting patterns in Australian newspaper writing styles: Results of a longitudinal study

Johnston, Jane and Graham, Caroline (2013). Shifting patterns in Australian newspaper writing styles: Results of a longitudinal study. Australian Journalism Review, 35 (2), 117-131.

Shifting patterns in Australian newspaper writing styles: Results of a longitudinal study

2013

Other Outputs

Thin Top End

Goedjen, Tara and Graham, Caroline (2013). Thin Top End. Southport, QLD, Australia: TEXT Journal of Writing and Writing Courses.

Thin Top End

2012

Journal Article

The new, old journalism: narrative writing in contemporary newspapers

Johnston, Jane and Graham, Caroline (2012). The new, old journalism: narrative writing in contemporary newspapers. Journalism Studies, 13 (4), 517-533. doi: 10.1080/1461670X.2011.629803

The new, old journalism: narrative writing in contemporary newspapers

2010

Journal Article

Suppression orders: reskilling journalists and the judiciary

Pearson, Mark and Graham, Caroline (2010). Suppression orders: reskilling journalists and the judiciary. Australian Journalism Review, 32 (1), 97-114.

Suppression orders: reskilling journalists and the judiciary

Supervision

Availability

Dr Caroline Graham is:
Not available for supervision

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Can a National Narrative Hinder Healing? Building a Sustainable Storytelling Model for The Australian Resilience Project

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Lujain Shafeeq, Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Reconciling the conflict between journalists' perceived audiences and actual audiences to produce a collaborative model for contemporary digital journalism.

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Are new legislations to protect national security slowly killing our societal watchdog? Safeguarding freedom of speech in relation to new national security laws.

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Frontlines of Science and the power of place in science podcasts

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Natalie Collie, Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Are new legislations to protect national security slowly killing our societal watchdog? Safeguarding freedom of speech in relation to new national security laws.

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Reversing the Algorithm Effect: Investigating the role of hybrid digital journalism in bridging the gap between mainstream media and culturally diverse communities

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Richard Murray

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Frontlines of Science and the power of place in science podcasts

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Natalie Collie, Dr Richard Murray

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Caroline Graham directly for media enquiries about:

  • data journalism
  • ethics
  • journalism
  • media
  • new media
  • outback australia
  • podcasting
  • true crime

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au