Document details

Risk Journalism Between Transnational Politics and Climate Change

Cham: Palgrave Macmillan (2018), xi, 292 pp.

Series: Palgrave Macmillan Series in International Political Communication

ISBN 978-3-319-73308-1 (ebook); 978-3-319-73307-4 (print)

"This book introduces a new methodology to assess the way in which journalists today operate within a new sphere of communicative 'public' interdependence across global digital communities by focusing on climate change debates. The authors propose a framework of 'cosmopolitan loops,' which addresses three major transformations in journalistic practice: the availability of 'fluid' webs of data which situate journalistic practice in a transnational arena; the increased involvement of journalists from developing countries in a transnationally interdependent sphere; and the increased awareness of a larger interconnected globalized 'risk' dimension of even local issues which shapes a new sphere of news 'horizons.' The authors draw on interviews with journalists to demonstrate that the construction of climate change 'issues' is increasingly situated in an emerging dimension of journalistic interconnectivity with climate actors across local, global and digital arenas and through physical and digital spaces of flows." (Publisher description)
1 Introduction, 1
2 Risk Journalism in Contexts of Trans-societal Interdependence, 11
3 Towards Cosmopolitan Relational 'Scales' of Actoral Interconnectivity, 51
4 Pakistan, a Glocalized Context for Global Media Climate Change Research, 79
5 Methodology, 117
6 Cosmopolitanized Scales of Climate Change Communication: Arenas, Actors and Communicative Spaces, 139
7 The Construction of Cosmopolitanized News of Climate Change at the Micro-scale: Representation, Production and Communication, 185
8 Cosmopolitan Relational Loops of Interconnectivity, 223