Caroline Jones (broadcaster)


Caroline Jones AO is an Australian radio and television journalist and television and media personality and social commentator, with a career in the industry spanning over 50 years.

Career

Jones joined the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Canberra in 1963 and later became the first female reporter for This Day Tonight. She then became a Four Corners presenter from 1972 to 1981. From 1987 to 1994 she presented a spiritually-focused radio program called The Search For Meaning on ABC Radio National, on which people told the stories of their lives.
In 1996 Jones began presenting weekly biographical program Australian Story on the ABC.
During 1988, Jones worked alongside Aboriginal broadcasters at Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association in Alice Springs as they produced their first cultural and current affairs programs for television. In 1998 she was appointed an Ambassador for Reconciliation by the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation.,
In December 2016, she announced she would leave the ABC and step down from her role on Australian Story, although stated she would not be retiring.

Awards and honours

Jones has won numerous media awards, including a Logie in 1972 and several Media Peace Prize Gold Citations. She was made an officer of the Order of Australia in 1988 and in 1989 was awarded the Archbishop of Sydney Citation in recognition of her contribution to Christian ideals in radio and television. She was a foundation member of the Australian Council for the Arts, formed in 1973, as well as a foundation member of the National Films Board of Review, formed in 1971.
The National Trust of Australia voted Jones one of Australia's Living Treasures in 1997. In 2007 she was made an Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of the Sunshine Coast.
Caroline Jones AO received a Doctor of Letters degree at the University of Sydney during a ceremony and dinner celebrating excellence in Australian journalism.