Legitimizing climate policy: The "risk construct" of global climate change in the German mass media

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Legitimizing climate policy: The "risk construct" of global climate change in the German mass media. / Peters, Hans Peter; Heinrichs, Harald.

In: International Journal of Sustainability Communication, No. 3, 06.2008, p. 14-36.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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@article{58b1e4a41c6d4085998f6b89d9451655,
title = "Legitimizing climate policy: The {"}risk construct{"} of global climate change in the German mass media",
abstract = "For at least a decade, global climate change has been a very important topic in German mass media coverage. Theories of media effects such as “cultivation” and “agenda setting” lead us to expect that climate change reporting will have an impact on the risk perception of the media audience. Furthermore, because of the medialization of politics, media reporting of climate change may be assumed to have political effects. Based on a content analysis of about 1200 media stories, the “risk construct” of global climate change in the German mass media is analysed and its potential functions for the ways in which society copes with climate change are discussed. The empirical analysis finds that the media construct of climate change closely mirrors the position of the scientific community as documented in the IPCC reports. The article discusses likely effects of climate change coverage on individual behaviour and on policy. It concludes that the key effect is the legitimization of climate politics as a political field.",
keywords = "Sustainability sciences, Communication",
author = "Peters, {Hans Peter} and Harald Heinrichs",
year = "2008",
month = jun,
language = "English",
pages = "14--36",
journal = "International Journal of Sustainability Communication",
issn = "1868-6192",
publisher = "Universit{\"a}t L{\"u}neburg, Institut f{\"u}r Umweltkommunikation (INFU)",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Legitimizing climate policy: The "risk construct" of global climate change in the German mass media

AU - Peters, Hans Peter

AU - Heinrichs, Harald

PY - 2008/6

Y1 - 2008/6

N2 - For at least a decade, global climate change has been a very important topic in German mass media coverage. Theories of media effects such as “cultivation” and “agenda setting” lead us to expect that climate change reporting will have an impact on the risk perception of the media audience. Furthermore, because of the medialization of politics, media reporting of climate change may be assumed to have political effects. Based on a content analysis of about 1200 media stories, the “risk construct” of global climate change in the German mass media is analysed and its potential functions for the ways in which society copes with climate change are discussed. The empirical analysis finds that the media construct of climate change closely mirrors the position of the scientific community as documented in the IPCC reports. The article discusses likely effects of climate change coverage on individual behaviour and on policy. It concludes that the key effect is the legitimization of climate politics as a political field.

AB - For at least a decade, global climate change has been a very important topic in German mass media coverage. Theories of media effects such as “cultivation” and “agenda setting” lead us to expect that climate change reporting will have an impact on the risk perception of the media audience. Furthermore, because of the medialization of politics, media reporting of climate change may be assumed to have political effects. Based on a content analysis of about 1200 media stories, the “risk construct” of global climate change in the German mass media is analysed and its potential functions for the ways in which society copes with climate change are discussed. The empirical analysis finds that the media construct of climate change closely mirrors the position of the scientific community as documented in the IPCC reports. The article discusses likely effects of climate change coverage on individual behaviour and on policy. It concludes that the key effect is the legitimization of climate politics as a political field.

KW - Sustainability sciences, Communication

UR - http://195.37.26.249/ijsc/docs/artikel/03/3_04_IJSC_Research_PetersHeinrichs.pdf

M3 - Journal articles

SP - 14

EP - 36

JO - International Journal of Sustainability Communication

JF - International Journal of Sustainability Communication

SN - 1868-6192

IS - 3

ER -