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ID111961
Title ProperUS media coverage of the Cancun climate change conference
LanguageENG
AuthorBoykoff, Jules
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Much was at stake at the 2010 United Nations climate change conference in CancĂșn, Mexico. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was being challenged by the world's two largest greenhouse gas emitters, China and the United States, after these countries reached a tenuous backroom deal one year earlier in Copenhagen. Meanwhile, scientific studies were warning of serious and severe climate change. This article analyzes newspaper articles and television segments from the US media that appeared during the timeframe of the CancĂșn conference, focusing on two key facets of coverage that continue to be important as negotiations proceed: the economic impacts and opportunities that climate change creates and the role that China plays in negotiations. I also examine which sources were allowed through the news gates and which ones were marginalized. I find that the US media discussed economic opportunities more frequently than economic impacts and that the media treated China in an even-handed way. Established political actors dominated coverage, followed by representatives of nongovernmental organizations and the business community. Meanwhile, grassroots activists and indigenous voices were marginalized.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Science and Politics Vol. 45, No.2; Apr 2012: p. 251-258
Journal SourcePolitical Science and Politics Vol. 45, No.2; Apr 2012: p. 251-258
Key WordsUnited Nations Climate Change Conference - 2010 ;  Cancun ;  Mexico ;  United States