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About The Book
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<p>This book reveals how journalists in the Global North and Global South mediate climate change by examining journalism and reporting in Australia and Bangladesh. This dual analysis presents a unique opportunity to examine the impacts of media and communication in two contrasting countries (in terms of economy income and population size) which both face serious climate change challenges. </p><p>In reporting on these challenges journalism as a political institutional and cultural practice has a significant role to play. It is influential in building public knowledge and contributes to knowledge production and dialogue however the question of who gets to speak and who doesn’t is a significant determinant of journalists’ capacity to establish authority and assign cultural meaning to realities. By measuring the visibility from presences and absences the book explores the extent to which the influences are similar or different in the two countries contrasting how journalists’ communication power conditions public thought on climate change. The investigation of climate communication across the North-South divide is especially urgent given the global commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and it is critical we gain a fuller understanding of the dynamics of climate communication in low-emitting low-income countries as much as in the high emitters high-income countries. This book contributes to this understanding and highlights the value of a dual analysis in being ably draw out parallels as well as divergences which will directly assist in developing cross-national strategies to help address the mounting challenge of climate change.</p><p>This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate change and environmental journalism as well as media and communication studies more broadly.</p>