FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions

Exegesis: This exegesis is based on the production of three features that explore local impacts of climate change. The features are part of a journalism research project that investigated the question: how can journalistic practice generate an accurate, balanced account of climate change issues in A...

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Main Author: Bridget Fitzgerald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asia Pacific Network 2013-05-01
Series:Pacific Journalism Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/246
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author Bridget Fitzgerald
author_facet Bridget Fitzgerald
author_sort Bridget Fitzgerald
collection DOAJ
description Exegesis: This exegesis is based on the production of three features that explore local impacts of climate change. The features are part of a journalism research project that investigated the question: how can journalistic practice generate an accurate, balanced account of climate change issues in Australia? The journalist rejects an approach that positions environmental reporting—or the ‘green beat’—as a form of advocacy journalism. In contrast, the researcher positions her journalism practice within mainstream Australian journalism. The researcher sets out to produce reports, which adhere to the conventional journalism norms, including those of ‘balance’ and ‘accuracy’. She explicitly critiques and rejects the phenomenon known as ‘balance as bias’, explored by Boykoff and Boycoff (2004) which, by over accessing climate sceptic sources, obstructs the reporting of climate change as an important economic, social, political and environmental issue. This exegesis explains and defends a different approach that focuses on local reporting rather than large-scale events in distant places. Robert Entman’s definition of framing is used to explain how climate change issues were addressed in each narrative.
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spelling doaj.art-3883934d38f243f7a9dc07588dee04192022-12-21T19:25:46ZengAsia Pacific NetworkPacific Journalism Review1023-94992324-20352013-05-0119110.24135/pjr.v19i1.246FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutionsBridget FitzgeraldExegesis: This exegesis is based on the production of three features that explore local impacts of climate change. The features are part of a journalism research project that investigated the question: how can journalistic practice generate an accurate, balanced account of climate change issues in Australia? The journalist rejects an approach that positions environmental reporting—or the ‘green beat’—as a form of advocacy journalism. In contrast, the researcher positions her journalism practice within mainstream Australian journalism. The researcher sets out to produce reports, which adhere to the conventional journalism norms, including those of ‘balance’ and ‘accuracy’. She explicitly critiques and rejects the phenomenon known as ‘balance as bias’, explored by Boykoff and Boycoff (2004) which, by over accessing climate sceptic sources, obstructs the reporting of climate change as an important economic, social, political and environmental issue. This exegesis explains and defends a different approach that focuses on local reporting rather than large-scale events in distant places. Robert Entman’s definition of framing is used to explain how climate change issues were addressed in each narrative.https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/246AustraliaBalanceBiasClimate changeEnvironmental journalismFraming
spellingShingle Bridget Fitzgerald
FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
Pacific Journalism Review
Australia
Balance
Bias
Climate change
Environmental journalism
Framing
title FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
title_full FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
title_fullStr FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
title_full_unstemmed FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
title_short FRONTLINE: Climate change reporting in an Australian context: Recognition, adaptation and solutions
title_sort frontline climate change reporting in an australian context recognition adaptation and solutions
topic Australia
Balance
Bias
Climate change
Environmental journalism
Framing
url https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/246
work_keys_str_mv AT bridgetfitzgerald frontlineclimatechangereportinginanaustraliancontextrecognitionadaptationandsolutions