Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers

The aim of this study is to investigate how moral issues surrounding one of the lengthiest environmental conflicts – the Canadian seal hunt controversy - were communicated by two Canadian mainstream newspapers: the national Globe and Mail, and the Newfoundland-based The Telegram in 2009, the year in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Safarov, Ronnie
Other Authors: Paré, Daniel
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39728
https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971
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spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/39728 2023-05-15T17:23:01+02:00 Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers Safarov, Ronnie Paré, Daniel 2019-10-16 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39728 https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971 en eng Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39728 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971 Environment ethics Media framing Animal welfare Seal hunt Moral othering Human-animal relationship Framing analysis Thesis 2019 ftunivottawa https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971 2021-01-04T18:32:53Z The aim of this study is to investigate how moral issues surrounding one of the lengthiest environmental conflicts – the Canadian seal hunt controversy - were communicated by two Canadian mainstream newspapers: the national Globe and Mail, and the Newfoundland-based The Telegram in 2009, the year in which the European Union banned the import of all seal products on the basis of a moral standard relating to the welfare of animals. At a general level, the purpose of this work is to examine how the news media construe and convey environmental ethical positions when dealing with complicated environmental issues. To this end, this thesis draws from media framing theory to implement a qualitative linguistic analysis of the 99 news articles to analyze how seals and sealers – the two main subjects of moral worth in this controversy – were framed in the two newspapers. The analysis found that seals were predominantly framed in accordance with their perceived social and economic benefit, largely overlooking animal welfare considerations. Sealers, on the other hand, tended to be portrayed as people of moral rectitude and brave seafarers, with a concomitant onus placed on the cultural and economic importance of sealing for Northerners. The findings corroborate claims that our perceptions of animal species, especially those which are considered wildlife, and the type of our relationship with them vary in accordance with human utility. At the same time, these perceptions are influenced by the social and cultural aspects of humans' relationship with the environment that may trump considerations of animal welfare and compassion toward sentient animals. Seen in the perspective of environmental ethics debate, the seal hunt controversy reveals the current lack of consensus on determining the most sound ethical principle in order to ensure our treatment of the environment is morally consistent. As the seal hunt controversy is not a standalone phenomenon of the protest based in animal welfare considerations, this thesis can be of value for the future research of comparable environmental controversies. Reconciling antagonistic environmental ethics is important for environmental policy-making and management, in order to ensure a greater and more productive stakeholder participation in solving environmental issues more effectively, while at the same realizing our moral obligations towards the animal world and the rest of the nature. Thesis Newfoundland uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
op_collection_id ftunivottawa
language English
topic Environment ethics
Media framing
Animal welfare
Seal hunt
Moral othering
Human-animal relationship
Framing analysis
spellingShingle Environment ethics
Media framing
Animal welfare
Seal hunt
Moral othering
Human-animal relationship
Framing analysis
Safarov, Ronnie
Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
topic_facet Environment ethics
Media framing
Animal welfare
Seal hunt
Moral othering
Human-animal relationship
Framing analysis
description The aim of this study is to investigate how moral issues surrounding one of the lengthiest environmental conflicts – the Canadian seal hunt controversy - were communicated by two Canadian mainstream newspapers: the national Globe and Mail, and the Newfoundland-based The Telegram in 2009, the year in which the European Union banned the import of all seal products on the basis of a moral standard relating to the welfare of animals. At a general level, the purpose of this work is to examine how the news media construe and convey environmental ethical positions when dealing with complicated environmental issues. To this end, this thesis draws from media framing theory to implement a qualitative linguistic analysis of the 99 news articles to analyze how seals and sealers – the two main subjects of moral worth in this controversy – were framed in the two newspapers. The analysis found that seals were predominantly framed in accordance with their perceived social and economic benefit, largely overlooking animal welfare considerations. Sealers, on the other hand, tended to be portrayed as people of moral rectitude and brave seafarers, with a concomitant onus placed on the cultural and economic importance of sealing for Northerners. The findings corroborate claims that our perceptions of animal species, especially those which are considered wildlife, and the type of our relationship with them vary in accordance with human utility. At the same time, these perceptions are influenced by the social and cultural aspects of humans' relationship with the environment that may trump considerations of animal welfare and compassion toward sentient animals. Seen in the perspective of environmental ethics debate, the seal hunt controversy reveals the current lack of consensus on determining the most sound ethical principle in order to ensure our treatment of the environment is morally consistent. As the seal hunt controversy is not a standalone phenomenon of the protest based in animal welfare considerations, this thesis can be of value for the future research of comparable environmental controversies. Reconciling antagonistic environmental ethics is important for environmental policy-making and management, in order to ensure a greater and more productive stakeholder participation in solving environmental issues more effectively, while at the same realizing our moral obligations towards the animal world and the rest of the nature.
author2 Paré, Daniel
format Thesis
author Safarov, Ronnie
author_facet Safarov, Ronnie
author_sort Safarov, Ronnie
title Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
title_short Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
title_full Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
title_fullStr Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
title_full_unstemmed Framing Environmental Dilemmas: The Ethical Positioning of the Seal Hunt In Two Canadian Newspapers
title_sort framing environmental dilemmas: the ethical positioning of the seal hunt in two canadian newspapers
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39728
https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39728
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971
op_doi https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23971
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