Disaster, uncertainty, opportunity or risk? Key messages from the television coverage of the IPCC’s 2013/2014 reports

Authors

  • James Painter Reuters Institute, Oxford University (UK).

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.6.4179

Keywords:

climate change, media coverage, IPCC reports, Europe

Abstract

This article examines the television coverage of the three 2013 and 2014 reports by the Working Groups of the IPCC in five European countries: Germany, Norway, Poland, Spain and the United Kingdom. The presence, salience and dominance of four frames (disaster, uncertainty, explicit risk and opportunity) were examined in each of the bulletins monitored. The «disaster» frame was the strongest of all the frames, measured by all three metrics. «Opportunity» was the next most present, followed by «uncertainty». Although the IPCC put considerable emphasis on a risk management approach to tackling climate change in its communication of the WG2 report, the «explicit risk» frame was hardly present. The UK stood out for including some coverage of sceptical viewpoints.

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Author Biography

James Painter, Reuters Institute, Oxford University (UK).

Director of the Journalism Fellowship Programme at the Reuters Institute at Oxford University (United Kingdom). He worked for the BBC World Service for 15 years in several capacities. He has written several books and journal articles on climate change and the media, including like Climate Change in the Media: Reporting Risk and Uncertainty (IB Tauris & RISJ, 2013).  

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Published

2016-04-15

How to Cite

Painter, J. (2016). Disaster, uncertainty, opportunity or risk? Key messages from the television coverage of the IPCC’s 2013/2014 reports. Metode Science Studies Journal, (6), 81–87. https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.6.4179
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Living with climate change. The challenge of a new cultural change

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