Research

1 October 2009

Covering the environmental issues and global warming in Delta land: A study of three newspapers

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Spasmodic attention is paid to the climate change threat in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. Pictured: Children climbing on dead mangroves in Kiribati. Cover picture from the Pacific Journaslism Review featuring the Bacon, Das and Zaman article.

The authors conclude in this research journal that environmental journalists in Bangladesh adopt approaches to sourcing and causation which enable them, in alliance with non-government organisations, to pursue their aim of actively intervening in the field of government policy of Bangladesh, both in international and local spheres.

This article explores the coverage of environmental issues in the daily newspapers of Bangladesh, a South-Asian country facing the onslaught of global warming because of its low-lying deltaic plains and overpopulation. The results are based on an examination of the content of environmental coverage in three national daily newspapers (two Bangla and one English-language) during June 2007.

Drawing on field theory and analytical frames from journalism studies, this study examines the principles of journalistic practices as revealed by the content of these publications. The findings indicate that environmental journalism is a strong subfield in Bangladesh’s media, which constructs its own veracity in ways that reflect the social, economic and political contexts of each publication.

Based on this small study, the authors conclude that environmental journalists in Bangladesh adopt approaches to sourcing and causation which enable them, in alliance with non-government organisations, to pursue their aim of actively intervening in the field of government policy of Bangladesh, both in international and local spheres.

Jahnnabi Das, Wendy Bacon and Akhteruz Zaman

Das, Jahnnabi; Bacon, Wendy; and Zaman, Akhteruz, (2009). Covering the environmental issues and global warming in Delta land: A study of three newspapers. Pacific Journalism Review, 15(20, pp. 10-33. Availability @PJR Informit: http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=300351531515081;res=E-LIBRARY

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