4.3 Article

Yesterday's dinner, tomorrow's weather, today's news? US newspaper coverage of food system contributions to climate change

Journal

PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages 1006-1014

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1368980008003480

Keywords

Climate change; Global warming; Food system; Agriculture; Media analysis

Funding

  1. Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future

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Background: There is strong evidence that what we eat and how it is produced affects climate change. Objective: The present paper examines coverage of food system contributions to climate change in top US newspapers. Design: Using a sample of sixteen leading US newspapers from September 2005 to January 2008, two coders identified 'food and climate change' and 'climate change' articles based on specified criteria. Analyses examined variation across time and newspaper, the level of content relevant to food systems' contributions to climate change, and how such content was framed. Results: There were 4582 'climate change' articles in these newspapers during this period. Of these, 2.4% mentioned food or agriculture contributions, with 0.4% coded as substantially focused on the issue and 0.5% mentioning food animal contributions. The level of content on food contributions to climate change increased across time. Articles initially addressed the issue primarily in individual terms, expanding to address business and government responsibility more in later articles. Conclusions: US newspaper coverage of food systems' effects on climate change during the study period increased but still did not reflect the increasingly solid evidence of the importance of these effects. Increased coverage may lead to responses by individuals, industry and government. Based on co-benefits with nutritional public health messages and climate change's food security threats, the public health nutrition community has an important role to play in elaborating and disseminating information about food and climate change for the US media.

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