Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers

Concern for the environment has become a global movement among countries of the world with pollution at the center. One of the solutions advocated towards improving solid waste management is the use of biodegradables. Therefore, the aim of this paper was to analyze the images associated with report...

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Main Author: Ben-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesia Strategic Sustainability 2020-07-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental, Sustainability, and Social Science
Online Access:https://journalkeberlanjutan.com/index.php/ijesss/article/view/27
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spelling doaj-90ab8db2313941469148144e1b060c382021-05-01T22:16:50ZengIndonesia Strategic SustainabilityInternational Journal of Environmental, Sustainability, and Social Science2720-96442721-08712020-07-011210.38142/ijesss.v1i2.27Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian NewspapersBen-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO0University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria Concern for the environment has become a global movement among countries of the world with pollution at the center. One of the solutions advocated towards improving solid waste management is the use of biodegradables. Therefore, the aim of this paper was to analyze the images associated with reporting biodegradables in five daily Nigerian newspapers, The Cable, The Guardian, Leadership, Premium Times and The Punch from April 1, 2019 to August 30, 2019. The study drew its theoretical foundation on the theory of Multimodal Discourse Analysis using quantitative and qualitative content analysis. Findings revealed 12 articles with 10 containing images. Four themes were associated with the images; environmental pollution (5), plastic products (1), politicians/political (3), and logo theme (1). Embedded meanings were uncovered within the images. Recommendations include allocating more resources towards training of environmental reporters to increase the output and quality of reports about the environment and biodegradables in particular. https://journalkeberlanjutan.com/index.php/ijesss/article/view/27
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ben-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO
spellingShingle Ben-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO
Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
International Journal of Environmental, Sustainability, and Social Science
author_facet Ben-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO
author_sort Ben-Collins Emeka NDINOJUO
title Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
title_short Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
title_full Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
title_fullStr Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
title_full_unstemmed Visual Images Associated With Reporting about Biodegradables in Nigerian Newspapers
title_sort visual images associated with reporting about biodegradables in nigerian newspapers
publisher Indonesia Strategic Sustainability
series International Journal of Environmental, Sustainability, and Social Science
issn 2720-9644
2721-0871
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Concern for the environment has become a global movement among countries of the world with pollution at the center. One of the solutions advocated towards improving solid waste management is the use of biodegradables. Therefore, the aim of this paper was to analyze the images associated with reporting biodegradables in five daily Nigerian newspapers, The Cable, The Guardian, Leadership, Premium Times and The Punch from April 1, 2019 to August 30, 2019. The study drew its theoretical foundation on the theory of Multimodal Discourse Analysis using quantitative and qualitative content analysis. Findings revealed 12 articles with 10 containing images. Four themes were associated with the images; environmental pollution (5), plastic products (1), politicians/political (3), and logo theme (1). Embedded meanings were uncovered within the images. Recommendations include allocating more resources towards training of environmental reporters to increase the output and quality of reports about the environment and biodegradables in particular.
url https://journalkeberlanjutan.com/index.php/ijesss/article/view/27
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