Is there a climate change reporting bias? A case study of English-language news articles, 2017-2022

被引:4
|
作者
Brimicombe, Chloe [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Reading, Dept Geog & Environm Sci, Reading RG6 6AB, England
关键词
POLICY;
D O I
10.5194/gc-5-281-2022
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
How weather hazards are communicated by the media is important. Which risks are understood, prioritized and acted upon can be influenced by the level of attention they receive. The presented work investigates whether or not the number of weather hazard news articles has increased since 2017, which weather hazards received the most attention in the news articles, and how often climate change was discussed in relation to weather hazards in these news articles. The methods used are advanced searches of Google and the Emergency Disaster Database (EM-DAT) for media articles considering weather hazards - specifically floods, heat waves, wildfires, storms and droughts - between 2017 and 2022. Results suggest that storms are more likely to be reported than any other climate risk, though wildfires generate more news articles per event. Bias in reporting needs to be addressed and is important, because it can exacerbate un-preparedness.
引用
收藏
页码:281 / 287
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Reducing the risk of bias in health behaviour change trials: Improving trial design, reporting or bias assessment criteria? A review and case study
    de Bruin, Marijn
    McCambridge, Jim
    Prins, Jan M.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2015, 30 (01) : 8 - 34
  • [42] Managing change in English language teaching through a journey of learning: a case study from China
    Ping, Wang
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TEACHER EDUCATION, 2010, 33 (04) : 437 - 445
  • [43] Statistical downscaling or bias adjustment? A case study involving implausible climate change projections of precipitation in Malawi
    R. Manzanas
    L. Fiwa
    C. Vanya
    H. Kanamaru
    J. M. Gutiérrez
    Climatic Change, 2020, 162 : 1437 - 1453
  • [44] Statistical downscaling or bias adjustment? A case study involving implausible climate change projections of precipitation in Malawi
    Manzanas, R.
    Fiwa, L.
    Vanya, C.
    Kanamaru, H.
    Gutierrez, J. M.
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2020, 162 (03) : 1437 - 1453
  • [45] Smart-Tutor Assisted Mobile Learning for Educational Continuity Post-COVID-19: A Case Study in English-Language Learning
    Fotsing, Janvier
    Mbadjoin, Theodore Njingang
    Tankam, Narcisse Talla
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2023, 20 (02): : 154 - 172
  • [47] Influence of News-Finds-Me Perception on accuracy, factuality and relevance assessment. Case study of news item on climate change
    Segado-Boj, Francisco
    Diaz-Campo, Jesus
    Navarro-Asensio, Enrique
    Remacha-Gonzalez, Lorena
    REVISTA MEDITERRANEA COMUNICACION-JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2020, 11 (02): : 85 - 103
  • [48] Towards an Institutional News Logic of Digital Native News Media? A Case Study of BuzzFeed's Reporting During the 2015 and 2017 UK General Election Campaigns
    Thomas, Richard
    Cushion, Stephen
    DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2019, 7 (10) : 1328 - 1345
  • [49] Power, the Pacific Islands, and the Prestige Press: A Case Study of How Climate Reporting is Influenced by UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Summits
    Shea, Meghan M.
    Painter, James
    Osaka, Shannon
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRESS-POLITICS, 2022, 27 (02): : 518 - 540
  • [50] Local Grammar Approach to Critical Discourse Analysis: A Case Study on the Discursive Representation of Climate Change in the UN News
    Ye, Jun
    Huan, Changpeng
    Su, Hang
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS, 2024,