The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media

Newspapers are key information sources and may influence both public opinion and policy. Previous studies have analysed the portrayal of ecosystem disservices in newspapers, but none have assessed the relative coverage between disservices and services, or how it might have changed over time. We repo...

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Main Authors: V. McLellan, C.M. Shackleton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Ecosystems and People
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2019.1667442
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spelling doaj-63d60c2711b14b4c8469132a52eef0312020-11-25T01:17:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEcosystems and People2639-59162019-01-0115124725610.1080/26395916.2019.16674421667442The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper mediaV. McLellan0C.M. Shackleton1Rhodes UniversityRhodes UniversityNewspapers are key information sources and may influence both public opinion and policy. Previous studies have analysed the portrayal of ecosystem disservices in newspapers, but none have assessed the relative coverage between disservices and services, or how it might have changed over time. We report on the relative frequency and depiction of ecosystem services and disservices in South African, English newspapers over a 15-year period. We used a SABINET search complemented by key-informant interviews with environmental journalists. For each article we recorded if it covered ecosystem services or disservices, the type of service or disservice, and article tone and length. Overall, 2,201 articles were found, of which 25% were on services and 75% on disservices. The number of articles per year declined over the 15-year period for services, but not disservices. The most common services were energy and craft materials, food production, recreation and culture, and disservices were human health, heat waves and floods. Articles on ecosystem services were 25–40% longer than those on disservices. Article lengths on both declined over the 15 years. The greater reporting of ecosystem disservices over services is likely to influence public opinion and environmental decision-making accordingly. EDITED BY Kurt Jaxhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2019.1667442content analysisecosystem disservicesecosystem servicesnewspaper mediasouth africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. McLellan
C.M. Shackleton
spellingShingle V. McLellan
C.M. Shackleton
The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
Ecosystems and People
content analysis
ecosystem disservices
ecosystem services
newspaper media
south africa
author_facet V. McLellan
C.M. Shackleton
author_sort V. McLellan
title The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
title_short The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
title_full The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
title_fullStr The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
title_full_unstemmed The relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in South African newspaper media
title_sort relative representation of ecosystem services and disservices in south african newspaper media
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Ecosystems and People
issn 2639-5916
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Newspapers are key information sources and may influence both public opinion and policy. Previous studies have analysed the portrayal of ecosystem disservices in newspapers, but none have assessed the relative coverage between disservices and services, or how it might have changed over time. We report on the relative frequency and depiction of ecosystem services and disservices in South African, English newspapers over a 15-year period. We used a SABINET search complemented by key-informant interviews with environmental journalists. For each article we recorded if it covered ecosystem services or disservices, the type of service or disservice, and article tone and length. Overall, 2,201 articles were found, of which 25% were on services and 75% on disservices. The number of articles per year declined over the 15-year period for services, but not disservices. The most common services were energy and craft materials, food production, recreation and culture, and disservices were human health, heat waves and floods. Articles on ecosystem services were 25–40% longer than those on disservices. Article lengths on both declined over the 15 years. The greater reporting of ecosystem disservices over services is likely to influence public opinion and environmental decision-making accordingly. EDITED BY Kurt Jax
topic content analysis
ecosystem disservices
ecosystem services
newspaper media
south africa
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2019.1667442
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