Boykoff, Maxwell T. (Author)
This project explores how United States (U.S.) media representational practices shape and affect ongoing international climate science and policy discourse regarding human contributions to climate change. Eminent climate scientists have come to consensus that human influences are the primary contributor to modern global climate change. However, over time, the United States---top emitter of greenhouse gases on planet Earth---has taken an isolationist role by disputing this and also by refusing to join concerted international efforts to curb human activities contributing to climate change. Many complex factors contribute to these conditions. However, the norms and pressures that guide journalistic decision-making and shape mass media coverage of anthropogenic climate science are a critical---yet understudied---element shaping ongoing communications at the highly politicized climate science- policy interface. The research is composed of three main components: First, I investigate the multifarious journalistic, political, cultural and economic norms that dynamically influence media coverage of anthropogenic climate science (Chapter 2). Second, I more specifically interrogate journalistic norms that shape the production of news on anthropogenic climate science at the science-policy interface (Chapter 3). Third, I focus analyses further through an examination of the journalistic norm of 'balanced reporting' when it is applied to anthropogenic climate change coverage in newspapers and television (Chapters 4 and 5). The first two steps are carried out through multiple qualitative methods such as interviews and critical discourse analyses. In step three, quantitative content analyses of human contributions to climate change are conducted, through archival research of newspaper and television news coverage. These endeavors employ the theoretical tools of political ecology, science studies, media studies and sociology of environment. Overall---through these mixed-method and interdisciplinary approaches---this project demonstrates that that mass-media coverage of climate change is not simply a random amalgam of newspaper articles and television segments; rather, it is a social relationship between scientists, policy actors and the public that is mediated by such news packages. Moreover, this research shows that the U.S. mass media plays a significant role in shaping the ongoing construction and maintenance of discourse on anthropogenic climate change at the interface of science and policy.
...MoreDescription Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 67/02 (2006): 668. UMI pub. no. 3205605.
Thesis
Sonnett, John H.;
(2006)
Representing the Earth: Global Climate Issues in Popular, Political, Scientific, Business, Industry, and Environmentalist News: A New Old Sociology of Knowledge
(/isis/citation/CBB001560796/)
Article
Randalls, Samuel;
(2010)
History of the 2ºC Climate Target
(/isis/citation/CBB001221297/)
Article
Moser, Susanne C.;
(2010)
Communicating Climate Change: History, Challenges, Process and Future Directions
(/isis/citation/CBB001221298/)
Article
Djerf-Pierre, Monika;
(2013)
Green Metacycles of Attention: Reassessing the Attention Cycles of Environmental News Reporting 1961--2010
(/isis/citation/CBB001320413/)
Article
Sundberg, Mikaela;
(2007)
Parameterizations as Boundary Objects on the Climate Arena
(/isis/citation/CBB000780235/)
Article
Lloyd, Elisabeth A.;
(2012)
The Role of “Complex” Empiricism in the Debates about Satellite Data and Climate Models
(/isis/citation/CBB001221697/)
Article
Jamison, Andrew;
(2010)
Climate Change Knowledge and Social Movement Theory
(/isis/citation/CBB001221292/)
Article
Lowe, Thomas;
Brown, Katrina;
Dessai, Suraje;
Doria, Miguel de França;
Haynes, Kat;
Vincent, Katharine;
(2006)
Does Tomorrow Ever Come? Disaster Narrative and Public Perceptions of Climate Change
(/isis/citation/CBB000830310/)
Book
Edwards, Paul N.;
(2010)
A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of Global Warming
(/isis/citation/CBB001022403/)
Article
Gupta, Joyeeta;
(2010)
A History of International Climate Change Policy
(/isis/citation/CBB001221294/)
Article
Fleming, James Rodger;
Jankovic, Vladimir;
(2011)
Introduction: Revisiting Klima
(/isis/citation/CBB001034571/)
Article
Ahern, Lee;
Bortree, Denise Sevick;
Smith, Alexandra Nutter;
(2013)
Key Trends in Environmental Advertising across 30 Years in National Geographic Magazine
(/isis/citation/CBB001320412/)
Article
James Powell;
(2017)
Scientists Reach 100% Consensus on Anthropogenic Global Warming
(/isis/citation/CBB664665682/)
Book
Yuriko Furuhata;
(2022)
Climatic Media: Transpacific Experiments in Atmospheric Control
(/isis/citation/CBB365768068/)
Article
Weart, Spencer R.;
(2007)
Money for Keeling: Monitoring CO2 Levels
(/isis/citation/CBB000700596/)
Article
Carvalho, Anabela;
(2007)
Ideological Cultures and Media Discourses on Scientific Knowledge: Re-reading News on Climate Change
(/isis/citation/CBB000720043/)
Article
Bickerstaff, K.;
Lorenzoni, I.;
Pidgeon, N. F.;
Poortinga, W.;
Simmons, P.;
(2008)
Reframing Nuclear Power in the UK Energy Debate: Nuclear Power, Climate Change Mitigation and Radioactive Waste
(/isis/citation/CBB000831216/)
Thesis
Shaw, Alison;
(2005)
Imbued Meaning: Science-Policy Interactions in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(/isis/citation/CBB001561705/)
Article
Holmberg, Gustav;
(2007)
Taming Tempests through Telegraphy and Media Appearances: Science Communication and the Construction of a Swedish Storm-Warning System before the Great War
(/isis/citation/CBB000771331/)
Article
Nielsen, Kristian H.;
Autzen, Charlotte;
(2011)
Looking Over the Shoulders of Researchers: In Quest of a Research-Media Partnership and Online, News Media--Based Researcher Identities on the Galathea 3 Expedition From 2006 to 2007
(/isis/citation/CBB001320109/)
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