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Canadian News Media Coverage of Climate Change: Historical Trajectories, Dominant Frames, and International Comparisons
56
Citations
28
References
2015
Year
Public OpinionClimate PolicyPolitical PolarizationDominant FramesMedia StudiesJournalismSocial SciencesClimate Change LawCanadian News DiscourseClimate ActionNews AnalyticsPolitical CommunicationContent AnalysisClimate LawHistorical TrajectoriesClimate ChangeClimate SciencesMedia InstitutionsPublic PolicyClimate HazardsGeographyClimate CommunicationNews CoverageNews ConsumptionInternational CoverageMass CommunicationArtsClimate GovernanceCanadian National NewspapersPolitical Science
We examine climate change news coverage from 1997 to 2010 in two Canadian national newspapers: the Globe and Mail and the National Post. The following questions guide our analysis: Why did the volume of climate change coverage rise and fall during the period? Focusing on the key period of 2007–2008, what kinds of issue categories, thematic frames, and rhetorical frames dominate the news discourse? Canadian news coverage of climate change is characterized by a series of peaks and troughs, combined with an overall increase in coverage. The volume of coverage appears to be primarily driven by national and international political events, more than by changes to national or global carbon emissions, or by other ecological factors. The Canadian news discourse about climate change is dominated by themes of government responsibility, policymaking, policy measures for mitigation, and ways to mitigate climate change.
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