Associate Professor Renee Barnes | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

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Associate Professor Renee Barnes

PhD La Trobe, MA(Research) La Trobe, GradCertTertTeach&Learn RMIT, BA QUT

  • Associate Professor in Journalism
  • School of Business and Creative Industries
Email
Telephone
+61 7 5430 1260
Office location
SD-K-1-1.42A
Campus
Sunshine Coast
Renee Barnes

Prior to joining academia, Renee was a journalist of more than fifteen years Renee has worked for numerous media organisations including the ABCThe Age and Australian Associated Press. Renee is an interdisciplinary researcher examining how digital media environments, particularly disinformation and synthetic content, shape individual vulnerability, behavioural responses, and societal wellbeing, with direct implications for public policy, mental health systems, and democratic resilience. She is the author of two books, Fandom and Polarization in Online Political Discussion: From Pop Culture to Politics (Palgrave 2022) and Uncovering Commenting Culture: Trolls, Fanboys and Lurkers, (Palgrave Macmillan 2018).

Professional Memberships

  • President of the premier Australia and New Zealand communication scholarly association: Australia and New Zealand Communication Association (AANZCA)
  • Editorial Board of leading journals: Media International Australia and Communication Research and Practice.

Professional Social Media

Renee’s research program sits at the intersection of disinformation, digital media, and audience wellbeing, with a particular focus on how contemporary information environments shape individual vulnerability, behaviour, and social outcomes. She leads an integrated body of work that examines how emerging forms of mediated communication including: political deepfakes, platformed news, and trauma-related reporting, interact with audience psychology, social context, and digital infrastructures to influence both online and offline behaviour. A central focus of her work is identifying who is most vulnerable to disinformation and why, particularly in the context of synthetic political media.

Research grants

Project Name

Investigators

Funding Body (Amount)

Year

Focus

Vulnerable and Spreading: Targeting Deepfake Political Videos

Renee Barnes (Lead CI), Rory Mulcahy, Aimee Riedel, Lucas Whittaker

Office of National Intelligence – National Intelligence Discovery Grant ($535,000)

2025–2027

Examines individual susceptibility to political deepfakes using experimental, biometric, and digital tracking methods to inform national security and democratic resilience

Trauma-Informed Reporting and News Wellbeing

Renee Barnes, Christina Driver, Alain Brunet (Lead CI)

Thompson Institute Internal Grant ($15,000)

2026

Investigates the psychological impacts of news content and develops trauma-informed approaches to journalism to support audience wellbeing

Political News Avoidance and Wellbeing

Renee Barnes (Lead CI), Melissa Innes

UniSC LAUNCH Grant ($26,144)

2024–2025

Examines motivations for political news avoidance across Australia and Singapore, with a focus on mental health, emotional fatigue, and information overload

Community Insights: Disaster-Ready Information Seeking

Rory, Mulcahy, Retha Scheepers, Renee Barnes

Moreton Bay Regional Council ($39,470)

2024

Examines the relationship between communication, resilience, and vulnerability in disaster information environments

Youth Engagement in Sustainability (YES) Research Initiative

Project Team (Renee Barnes as CI on sub-projects)

Queensland Government ($200,000 total; $40,092 led projects)

2022

Multi-project initiative engaging young people in research on regional news diversity and health misinformation

Regional Reputation and Media Portrayal

Renee Barnes (Lead CI), Retha de Villiers Scheepers, Noel Tracey

Moreton Bay Council ($137,000)

2021–2024

Examines how media representation shapes regional identity, reputation, and community perception

 

Dr Barnes welcomes enquiries from students interested in supervision in investigating any elements of online participation, in particular in relation to disinformation, social media and online political communication and how they relate to individual vulnerability, behavioural responses, and societal wellbeing. She has a particular interest in the intersection of popular culture and fan studies with political communication and participatory practice.

Research areas

  • online participatory practice
  • fandom and participatory politics
  • online journalism
  • social media
  • alternative and community journalism
  • the audience of news

Dr Barnes welcomes enquiries from students interested in supervision in investigating any elements of online participation, in particular in relation to online news and social media. She has a particular interest in the intersection of popular culture and fan studies with political communication and participatory practice.

Teaching areas

  • Digital Journalism
  • Podcasting and radio news
  • Social Media
  • Research design and methods
  • Communication theory

Renee's specialist areas of knowledge include digital journalism and new media, disinformation and synthetic media, political deepfakes, online behaviours including trolling, social media, alternative journalism, podcasting.

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In the news

person holding mobile phone, looking at fake news story
Who falls for political deepfakes? National study seeks to find and protect most vulnerable
16 Jul 2025

As artificial intelligence evolves, deepfakes and misleading digitally created content have become increasingly difficult for people to distinguish from reality, impacting national security, elections and trust in media