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Dodgy science or global necessity? Local media reporting of marine parks

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posted on 2024-11-16, 00:38 authored by Michelle VoyerMichelle Voyer, Tanja DreherTanja Dreher, William Gladstone, Heather Goodall
The digital age and globalization has brought international issues to our doorstep and placed the local in the context of the global. News media have played a crucial role in allowing recognition and exploration of the global origins and outcomes of many environmental crises such as climate change, deforestation, threatened species management and biodiversity loss (Cottle, 2011c). The modern environmental movement has responded to the global scale of these crises with campaigns for global solutions. Many of these campaigns rely heavily on coordinated, collective action across a multitude of jurisdictions around the world, with the success of global campaigns dependent on the success of multiple local-scale actions. The slogan "think global, act local" has become the rallying cry of the modern environmental movement. Yet the individual success of these actions depends significantly on local conditions, particularly community and political support. The media, including local news and community-based media, play a crucial role in influencing both these factors.

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Citation

Voyer, M., Dreher, T., Gladstone, W. and Goodall, H. "Dodgy science or global necessity? Local media reporting of marine parks." Environmental Conflict and the Media. Ed.B. Hutchins and L. Lester. New York: Peter Lang, 2013, 153-168.

Pagination

153-168

Publisher

Peter Lang Publishers

Language

English

Notes

ISBN: 9781433118937

RIS ID

89775

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