4.3 Article

Disputed climate science in the media: Do countries matter?

Journal

PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF SCIENCE
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 220-235

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0963662512467732

Keywords

climate change; framing risk; media and science; media representations; public understanding of science; science communication; science experts

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This article presents findings from a large-scale newspaper analysis of climate change discourses in four developed countries, using corpus linguistics methodology. We map the discourse over time, showing peaks and troughs of attention and explaining their causes. Different connotations of common terms such as global warming and climate change in different countries are analysed. Cluster and key-word analysis show the relative salience of specific words and word combinations during crucial periods. We identify main claims makers and the relative visibility of advocates and sceptics. The main finding is that former are far more prominent in all countries. We also look at the coverage of climategate'. Finally, we make reference to existing theoretical frameworks.

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