Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc

As climate policy focusing events, wildfires are distinct from hurricanes, floods, and tornados because they also result in the release of massive smoke plumes that contribute to the concentration of atmospheric carbon. However, unlike melting glaciers, wildfires may be easier to dismiss as individu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen P. Groff (11271246)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001
id ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/15163017
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/15163017 2023-05-15T16:22:29+02:00 Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc Stephen P. Groff (11271246) 2021-08-13T05:06:08Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table1_Magnifying_Focusing_Events_Global_Smoke_Plumes_and_International_Construal_Connections_in_Newspaper_Coverage_of_2020_Wildfire_Events_doc/15163017 doi:10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Language Health Counselling Health Promotion Comparative Language Studies Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified Communication Studies International and Development Communication Organisational Interpersonal and Intercultural Communication extreme weather events newspaper coverage climate change wildfires focusing events public policy narrative framing Dataset 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001 2021-12-20T04:24:34Z As climate policy focusing events, wildfires are distinct from hurricanes, floods, and tornados because they also result in the release of massive smoke plumes that contribute to the concentration of atmospheric carbon. However, unlike melting glaciers, wildfires may be easier to dismiss as individual acts of human error, spontaneous acts of mother nature, and/or necessary ecological processes of agricultural renewal. This paper presents a mixed-methods analysis of 150 international and domestic English language newspaper articles related to wildfire events occurring in Australia, Canada, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States during the year 2020. The analysis examines how news coverage of wildfire events might focus or diffuse attention to international climate policy and anthropogenic global warming. The quantitative findings provide evidence to suggest that 30% of wildfire coverage is attributed to climate change. However, qualitative analysis suggests that climate change is acknowledged as a blame frame that is often only inferentially attributed to anthropogenic origins. The mixed-methods analysis finds that only 6% of news coverage related wildfire events to emission contributions. The analysis of these exemplar articles suggests that the international travel of wildfire smoke may serve as a focusing event from which to emphasize wildfires as both a consequence of and contributor to, global warming. Findings indicate that environmental coalitions and scientific experts’ engagement with the press are integral to creating frames that link the increasing frequency, duration, and range of wildfire events to climate policy needs. Dataset glacier* Unknown Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Language
Health Counselling
Health Promotion
Comparative Language Studies
Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Communication Studies
International and Development Communication
Organisational
Interpersonal and Intercultural Communication
extreme weather events
newspaper coverage
climate change
wildfires
focusing events
public policy
narrative framing
spellingShingle Language
Health Counselling
Health Promotion
Comparative Language Studies
Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Communication Studies
International and Development Communication
Organisational
Interpersonal and Intercultural Communication
extreme weather events
newspaper coverage
climate change
wildfires
focusing events
public policy
narrative framing
Stephen P. Groff (11271246)
Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
topic_facet Language
Health Counselling
Health Promotion
Comparative Language Studies
Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Communication Studies
International and Development Communication
Organisational
Interpersonal and Intercultural Communication
extreme weather events
newspaper coverage
climate change
wildfires
focusing events
public policy
narrative framing
description As climate policy focusing events, wildfires are distinct from hurricanes, floods, and tornados because they also result in the release of massive smoke plumes that contribute to the concentration of atmospheric carbon. However, unlike melting glaciers, wildfires may be easier to dismiss as individual acts of human error, spontaneous acts of mother nature, and/or necessary ecological processes of agricultural renewal. This paper presents a mixed-methods analysis of 150 international and domestic English language newspaper articles related to wildfire events occurring in Australia, Canada, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States during the year 2020. The analysis examines how news coverage of wildfire events might focus or diffuse attention to international climate policy and anthropogenic global warming. The quantitative findings provide evidence to suggest that 30% of wildfire coverage is attributed to climate change. However, qualitative analysis suggests that climate change is acknowledged as a blame frame that is often only inferentially attributed to anthropogenic origins. The mixed-methods analysis finds that only 6% of news coverage related wildfire events to emission contributions. The analysis of these exemplar articles suggests that the international travel of wildfire smoke may serve as a focusing event from which to emphasize wildfires as both a consequence of and contributor to, global warming. Findings indicate that environmental coalitions and scientific experts’ engagement with the press are integral to creating frames that link the increasing frequency, duration, and range of wildfire events to climate policy needs.
format Dataset
author Stephen P. Groff (11271246)
author_facet Stephen P. Groff (11271246)
author_sort Stephen P. Groff (11271246)
title Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
title_short Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
title_full Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
title_fullStr Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
title_full_unstemmed Table1_Magnifying Focusing Events: Global Smoke Plumes and International Construal Connections in Newspaper Coverage of 2020 Wildfire Events.doc
title_sort table1_magnifying focusing events: global smoke plumes and international construal connections in newspaper coverage of 2020 wildfire events.doc
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre glacier*
genre_facet glacier*
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table1_Magnifying_Focusing_Events_Global_Smoke_Plumes_and_International_Construal_Connections_in_Newspaper_Coverage_of_2020_Wildfire_Events_doc/15163017
doi:10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.713591.s001
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