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How newspapers represent environmental risk: the case of carcinogenic hazards in South Korea

Authors
Hove, ThomasPaek, Hye-JinYun, MoonyoungJwa, Bokyung
Issue Date
Nov-2015
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
news framing; uncertainty; environmental risk; emotion; uncertainty presentation format
Citation
JOURNAL OF RISK RESEARCH, v.18, no.10, pp.1320 - 1336
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF RISK RESEARCH
Volume
18
Number
10
Start Page
1320
End Page
1336
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/16509
DOI
10.1080/13669877.2014.923025
ISSN
1366-9877
Abstract
This study pursues the following aims: to examine how news stories use frames, emotions, and uncertainty to present environmental risk information; to identify which aspects of risk issues they highlight; and to analyze how these stories' representations of risk and uncertainty might differ according to the sources they use. Content analysis of 641 news stories in South Korea over the last decade yields three findings: (1) reassurance was the most frequently used news frame, while uncertainty and emotion were used less often than expected; (2) news stories using government/industry/experts as sources vs. activists/lay people highlighted different news frames and risk information; and (3) the two most frequently used uncertainty presentation formats were single point estimate and verbal estimate. This study contributes to existing literature on the roles of media in environmental risk communication in two ways. First, it examines the specific formats journalists use to present uncertainty about risks. Second, it integrates news frames with the emotional characteristics of risk communication and with differences in risk information characteristics according to source. Implications are discussed regarding how a better understanding of news representations of risk could inform and enhance cooperation between experts and journalists, and lead to more effective environmental risk communication. Finally, this content analysis provides a stepping stone for future research that could further investigate and test how publics respond to risk messages that have varying permutations of emotional content and risk presentation formats.
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