Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue

The role of social media in communicating emerging environmental issues has received little attention. One such issue is ocean acidification (OA), the process by which carbon dioxide (CO2) acidifies oceans. Although scientists consider OA to be as dangerous as climate change (CC) and both problems a...

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Main Authors: Sojung Claire Kim, Sandra L. Cooke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Cogent Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1532375
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spelling doaj-5bdc9ba9094047f9ad1351d7eff051142021-03-02T14:23:43ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Environmental Science2331-18432018-01-014110.1080/23311843.2018.15323751532375Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogueSojung Claire Kim0Sandra L. Cooke1George Mason UniversityHigh Point University, One University ParkwayThe role of social media in communicating emerging environmental issues has received little attention. One such issue is ocean acidification (OA), the process by which carbon dioxide (CO2) acidifies oceans. Although scientists consider OA to be as dangerous as climate change (CC) and both problems are caused by excess CO2 emissions, public awareness of OA is low. We investigated public discussions about CC and OA on Twitter, identifying frames and tweeter characteristics. Tweeting patterns before and after President Trump’s 1 June 2017 announcement of the U.S.’s withdrawal from the international Paris Climate Agreement were compared because of the potential for diverse framing of this globally communicated event. For CC tweets, Political/Ideological Struggle (PIS) and Disaster (DS) frames were prevalent, with PIS frames increasing threefold after Trump’s announcement. DS, Settled Science (SS), and Promotional frames were prevalent among OA tweets, with SS decreasing and PIS increasing after the announcement. Our findings suggest that Trump’s decision sparked discourse on CC and facilitated expressions of politicized opinions on Twitter. We conclude that with a careful understanding of issue familiarity among its publics, social media can be effective for disseminating information and opinion of established and emerging environmental issues, complementing traditional media outlets.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1532375environmental framingclimate changeocean acidificationtrump paris agreement withdrawalsocial mediacontent analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sojung Claire Kim
Sandra L. Cooke
spellingShingle Sojung Claire Kim
Sandra L. Cooke
Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
Cogent Environmental Science
environmental framing
climate change
ocean acidification
trump paris agreement withdrawal
social media
content analysis
author_facet Sojung Claire Kim
Sandra L. Cooke
author_sort Sojung Claire Kim
title Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
title_short Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
title_full Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
title_fullStr Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
title_full_unstemmed Environmental framing on Twitter: Impact of Trump’s Paris Agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
title_sort environmental framing on twitter: impact of trump’s paris agreement withdrawal on climate change and ocean acidification dialogue
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Environmental Science
issn 2331-1843
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The role of social media in communicating emerging environmental issues has received little attention. One such issue is ocean acidification (OA), the process by which carbon dioxide (CO2) acidifies oceans. Although scientists consider OA to be as dangerous as climate change (CC) and both problems are caused by excess CO2 emissions, public awareness of OA is low. We investigated public discussions about CC and OA on Twitter, identifying frames and tweeter characteristics. Tweeting patterns before and after President Trump’s 1 June 2017 announcement of the U.S.’s withdrawal from the international Paris Climate Agreement were compared because of the potential for diverse framing of this globally communicated event. For CC tweets, Political/Ideological Struggle (PIS) and Disaster (DS) frames were prevalent, with PIS frames increasing threefold after Trump’s announcement. DS, Settled Science (SS), and Promotional frames were prevalent among OA tweets, with SS decreasing and PIS increasing after the announcement. Our findings suggest that Trump’s decision sparked discourse on CC and facilitated expressions of politicized opinions on Twitter. We conclude that with a careful understanding of issue familiarity among its publics, social media can be effective for disseminating information and opinion of established and emerging environmental issues, complementing traditional media outlets.
topic environmental framing
climate change
ocean acidification
trump paris agreement withdrawal
social media
content analysis
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2018.1532375
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