Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate

This study explores the mediatisation of political challenges involved in addressing climate change, in particular relation to the United Nations framework in place to tackle the issue. Climate change is one of the most urgent issues of our time and extensive international collaboration is required...

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Main Author: Laksa, Unn
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of Liverpool Repository 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17638/00015913
https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/15913
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spelling ftdatacite:10.17638/00015913 2023-05-15T16:10:42+02:00 Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate Laksa, Unn 2014 https://dx.doi.org/10.17638/00015913 https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/15913 unknown University of Liverpool Repository Creative Commons Attribution No Derivatives 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/legalcode cc-by-nd-3.0 CC-BY-ND article-journal ScholarlyArticle Thesis Text 2014 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17638/00015913 2022-04-01T10:33:10Z This study explores the mediatisation of political challenges involved in addressing climate change, in particular relation to the United Nations framework in place to tackle the issue. Climate change is one of the most urgent issues of our time and extensive international collaboration is required in order to deal with it appropriately. Due to the nature of climate change, this thesis argues that ethical considerations should be at the core of public debates. Addressing climate change will require the implementation of drastic and often expensive measures, which might be particularly challenging to ‘western’ way of life. The media provides a crucial forum for debating the challenges climate change poses to our societies. This thesis examines how the issue is represented in the television and print media in three European countries: the United Kingdom, Denmark and the Faroe Islands during two global conferences on climate change,COP15 and COP16. This is backed up by examination of the ideal role of the media within liberal democracies and how such a role can be used as a benchmark against which to measure coverage. The thesis applies an ethical lens to the three different national media and their treatment of climate change to explore how the issue is made meaningful to the public. It examines the prominence of different ethical arguments – divided into cosmopolitan and communitarian positions - within public debates on climate change. It develops a comprehensive framework that identifies the key issues in the debate over climate change, and how ethical positions figure within them. Through the application of this analytical framework, this thesis seeks to shed light on the overall quality of public debate on the main issues around climate change in the respective countries. It also considers the extent to which media coverage in the United Kingdom, Denmark and the Faroe Islands could represent an emerging transnational public sphere on climate change. These questions are addressed through a quantitative and qualitative content analysis of climate change coverage. The approach deployed means that the study is able to examine in a systematic fashion how values underpin the debate on climate change in the respective countries. This thesis also brings a much needed comparative dimension to the analysis of media coverage of climate change. The findings demonstrate that political ideology plays a stronger role in shaping coverage in the UK context, whilst its role is less significant in Denmark and the Faroe Islands. The analysis also identifies some strong similarities in coverage across the countries, both with respect to the quantity of coverage, the topics and values emphasised. In addition, the thesis concludes that coverage across the three countries could indicate an emerging transnational public sphere on climate change. Text Faroe Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Faroe Islands
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description This study explores the mediatisation of political challenges involved in addressing climate change, in particular relation to the United Nations framework in place to tackle the issue. Climate change is one of the most urgent issues of our time and extensive international collaboration is required in order to deal with it appropriately. Due to the nature of climate change, this thesis argues that ethical considerations should be at the core of public debates. Addressing climate change will require the implementation of drastic and often expensive measures, which might be particularly challenging to ‘western’ way of life. The media provides a crucial forum for debating the challenges climate change poses to our societies. This thesis examines how the issue is represented in the television and print media in three European countries: the United Kingdom, Denmark and the Faroe Islands during two global conferences on climate change,COP15 and COP16. This is backed up by examination of the ideal role of the media within liberal democracies and how such a role can be used as a benchmark against which to measure coverage. The thesis applies an ethical lens to the three different national media and their treatment of climate change to explore how the issue is made meaningful to the public. It examines the prominence of different ethical arguments – divided into cosmopolitan and communitarian positions - within public debates on climate change. It develops a comprehensive framework that identifies the key issues in the debate over climate change, and how ethical positions figure within them. Through the application of this analytical framework, this thesis seeks to shed light on the overall quality of public debate on the main issues around climate change in the respective countries. It also considers the extent to which media coverage in the United Kingdom, Denmark and the Faroe Islands could represent an emerging transnational public sphere on climate change. These questions are addressed through a quantitative and qualitative content analysis of climate change coverage. The approach deployed means that the study is able to examine in a systematic fashion how values underpin the debate on climate change in the respective countries. This thesis also brings a much needed comparative dimension to the analysis of media coverage of climate change. The findings demonstrate that political ideology plays a stronger role in shaping coverage in the UK context, whilst its role is less significant in Denmark and the Faroe Islands. The analysis also identifies some strong similarities in coverage across the countries, both with respect to the quantity of coverage, the topics and values emphasised. In addition, the thesis concludes that coverage across the three countries could indicate an emerging transnational public sphere on climate change.
format Text
author Laksa, Unn
spellingShingle Laksa, Unn
Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
author_facet Laksa, Unn
author_sort Laksa, Unn
title Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
title_short Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
title_full Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
title_fullStr Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
title_full_unstemmed Media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
title_sort media coverage of international climate negotiations: assessing the ethical dimension of the global debate
publisher University of Liverpool Repository
publishDate 2014
url https://dx.doi.org/10.17638/00015913
https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/15913
geographic Faroe Islands
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.17638/00015913
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