ABSTRACT

Environmental Risks and the Media explores the ways in which environmental risks, threats and hazards are represented, transformed and contested by the media. At a time when popular conceptions of the environment as a stable, natural world with which humanity interferes are being increasingly contested, the medias methods of encouraging audiences to think about environmental risks - from the BSE or 'mad cow' crisis to global climate change - are becoming more and more controversial.
Examining large-scale disasters, as well as 'everyday' hazards, the contributors consider the tensions between entertainment and information in media coverage of the environment. How do the media frame 'expert', 'counter-expert' and 'lay public' definitions of environmental risk? What role do environmental pressure groups like Greenpeace or 'eco-warriors' and 'green guerrillas' play in shaping what gets covered and how? Does the media emphasis on spectacular events at the expense of issue-sensitive reporting exacerbate the public tendency to overestimate sudden and violent risks and underestimate chronic long-term ones?

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

The media politics of environmental risk

part I|63 pages

Mapping environmental risks

chapter Chapter 2|10 pages

Interest group strategies and journalistic norms

News media framing of environmental issues

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

The burrowers

News about bodies, tunnels and green guerrillas

part II|51 pages

Denaturalising risk politics

part III|55 pages

Bodies, risks and public environments

chapter Chapter 9|15 pages

Selling control

Ideological dilemmas of sun, tanning, risk and leisure

chapter Chapter 10|11 pages

Exclusionary environments

The media career of youth homelessness

chapter Chapter 11|13 pages

The female body at risk

Media, sexual violence and the gendering of public environments

chapter Chapter 12|14 pages

‘Landscapes of fear'

Public places, fear of crime and the media

part IV|42 pages

Globalising environments at risk

chapter Chapter 13|17 pages

Communicating climate change through the media

Predictions, politics and perceptions of risk

chapter Chapter 15|12 pages

Mediating the risks of virtual environments