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Media and the Geographies of Climate Justice: Indigenous Peoples, Nature and the Geopolitics of Climate Change

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Author(s)
Anna Roosvall
Matthew Tegelberg
Keywords
climate justice
indigenous peoples
geography
media
climate change
international politics
nature
transnationalism
misframing
representation.
Communication. Mass media
P87-96
Communities. Classes. Races
HT51-1595
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/241346
Online Access
https://doaj.org/article/7be8910e423d4c9bbf0e76a02518f564
Abstract
Climate change has universal, global implications and uneven, particular local effects. Examining how this complex phenomenon is understood in public discourse calls for the merging of theorizing on geography, justice, nature and the mediation of environmental protest. This article combines these strands to discuss relationships between peoples, places, politics, nature and the media in terms of climate justice. Empirical examples are drawn from interviews conducted with indigenous activists and observations of press events organized by indigenous groups during a U.N. climate summit. We argue that the “misframing” of indigenous peoples at international climate summits underlines the necessity to integrate the perspectives of marginalized, transnational groups and their growing demands for climate justice into future media research on climate change, and the need for a re-framing of the mediation of climate change.
Date
2015-03-01
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:doaj.org/article:7be8910e423d4c9bbf0e76a02518f564
1726-670X
1726-670X
10.31269/triplec.v13i1.654
https://doaj.org/article/7be8910e423d4c9bbf0e76a02518f564
Collections
Climate Ethics

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