Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > Censorship in Australia


 Contents
Australia, like all countries, has rules that restrict or ban the production, sale, and distribution of some creative works, including magazines, movies, television, computer games, web site content, live theatre, music and other forms.

1 History

To be filled in, points to consider:

2 Current Situation

Currently, Australia's censorship regime is largely the purview of the Australian Office of Film and Literature Classification, a Federal Government body. All feature films, videos, television shows (exempting news, current affairs, and documentaries), computer games, and some magazines (those that contain sexual content) for commercial release are required to be submitted to this body, made up of "community representatives" appointed by the government for two-year (??) terms. Some films (those made for educational or training purposes, for instance) are exempt from classification under certain conditions. In addition, film festivals may screen films that haven't been classified as long as they restrict entry to those 18 and over.

The classification system for visual content is largely standardised for television, videos, and feature films. The current guidelines, which have changed relatively little over the past few years, may be summarised as follows:

Any film that does not meet the above guidelines for any category is "Refused Classification" and the distribution and exhibition of such carries heavy maximum penalties involving, potentially, both fines and jail.

Australian commercial network television screens only G-rated material from 3:30 until 7:30 p.m., up to PG-rated until 8:30 p.m., and only M-rated until 9:30 p.m. R-rated material is never shown on broadcast television in Australia. In practice, Australian television is considerably more relaxed about sex and coarse language than American networks.

On subscription television, some channels have been able to carry R-rated material; the foreign-language service World Movies frequently carries R-rated movies. General entertainment channel Arena was unable to show the uncut, R-rated version of Reservoir Dogs after promoting it heavily in 1998. Arena eventually decided not to air the movie, claiming they were unable to cut the movie to meet the MA rating.

Enforcement of classification rules is through an agreement between the Federal and the six state and two territory governments, so the state police would be involved in the arrest and prosecution of anybody violating the classification rules.



Read more »

Non User