Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?

This commentary briefly outlines characteristics of Peace Journalism (PJ), and then summarises ways that PJ could inspire justice and crisis-oriented climate journalism, including ethical moorings, audience orientation, journalism practices, self-reflexivity and scepticism of the practices of ‘obje...

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Autor principal: Robert A Hackett
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Asia Pacific Network 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/533413b5b7a045ebb54684a07e3ecad2
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:533413b5b7a045ebb54684a07e3ecad22021-12-02T13:03:23ZCan Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?10.24135/pjr.v23i1.1001023-94992324-2035https://doaj.org/article/533413b5b7a045ebb54684a07e3ecad22017-07-01T00:00:00Zhttps://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/100https://doaj.org/toc/1023-9499https://doaj.org/toc/2324-2035 This commentary briefly outlines characteristics of Peace Journalism (PJ), and then summarises ways that PJ could inspire justice and crisis-oriented climate journalism, including ethical moorings, audience orientation, journalism practices, self-reflexivity and scepticism of the practices of ‘objectivity’.  While there are also important disjunctures between them, particularly around advocacy, partisanship and conflict escalation, both paradigms have liberal and radical variants.  The author concludes with a note on structural media change as a corequisite of either paradigm’s implementation. Robert A HackettAsia Pacific Networkarticleclimate changeclimate crisisclimate journalismglobaljournalism paradigmsIndigenous concept of warriorCommunication. Mass mediaP87-96Journalism. The periodical press, etc.PN4699-5650ENPacific Journalism Review, Vol 23, Iss 1 (2017)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic climate change
climate crisis
climate journalism
global
journalism paradigms
Indigenous concept of warrior
Communication. Mass media
P87-96
Journalism. The periodical press, etc.
PN4699-5650
spellingShingle climate change
climate crisis
climate journalism
global
journalism paradigms
Indigenous concept of warrior
Communication. Mass media
P87-96
Journalism. The periodical press, etc.
PN4699-5650
Robert A Hackett
Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
description This commentary briefly outlines characteristics of Peace Journalism (PJ), and then summarises ways that PJ could inspire justice and crisis-oriented climate journalism, including ethical moorings, audience orientation, journalism practices, self-reflexivity and scepticism of the practices of ‘objectivity’.  While there are also important disjunctures between them, particularly around advocacy, partisanship and conflict escalation, both paradigms have liberal and radical variants.  The author concludes with a note on structural media change as a corequisite of either paradigm’s implementation.
format article
author Robert A Hackett
author_facet Robert A Hackett
author_sort Robert A Hackett
title Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
title_short Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
title_full Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
title_fullStr Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
title_full_unstemmed Can Peace Journalism be transposed to Climate Crisis journalism?
title_sort can peace journalism be transposed to climate crisis journalism?
publisher Asia Pacific Network
publishDate 2017
url https://doaj.org/article/533413b5b7a045ebb54684a07e3ecad2
work_keys_str_mv AT robertahackett canpeacejournalismbetransposedtoclimatecrisisjournalism
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