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https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:ilm1-2017100025

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Media and risk: a phase model elucidating media attention to nuclear energy risk

[phd thesis]

Kristiansen, Silje

Abstract

In today's risk-filled society, it is vital to recognize not only the risks that we face every day, but also that knowledge of such risks spreads, above all, via mass media. Risk-related information contributes to our knowledge and affects how we perceive risks and what risk decisions we ultimately ... view more

In today's risk-filled society, it is vital to recognize not only the risks that we face every day, but also that knowledge of such risks spreads, above all, via mass media. Risk-related information contributes to our knowledge and affects how we perceive risks and what risk decisions we ultimately make. Among the most memorable disasters of risks taken in recent memory, the nuclear energy accident in Fukushima, Japan, in 2011 changed how the public, policymakers, and media outlets perceive and deliberate the risk of nuclear energy. In response, the research question of this study interrogates how media portrayed the risk of nuclear energy and how coverage of the technology changed after the accident at Fukushima. The study concentrates on how two Swiss newspapers covered nuclear energy between 2010 and early 2015. By using a broad definition of risk and an innovative empirical operationalization of the concept, the study identifies different risk attention phases in media coverage, each characterized by different focus on risk dimensions. Interestingly, results show that those media paid considerable attention to political decisions about the use of nuclear energy, and surprisingly, the detrimental dimension of risk was in focus even before the 2011 nuclear accident in Japan. Although the benefits of nuclear technology became obscured after Fukushima, they recuperated interest as early as a year later. Such results raise a question regarding risk decisions and the use of nuclear energy - namely, when do societies decide upon risks, and how do media portray the risk at that moment in time?... view less

Keywords
attitude change; Switzerland; risk communication; newspaper; opinion formation; reception; nuclear energy; reporting; attention; mass media; risk assessment

Classification
Impact Research, Recipient Research
Technology Assessment
Media Contents, Content Analysis

Document language
English

Publication Year
2017

Publisher
Univ.-Verl. Ilmenau

City
Ilmenau

Page/Pages
294 p.

Series
NEU - Nachhaltigkeits-, Energie- und Umweltkommunikation, 5

ISSN
2197-6937

ISBN
978-3-86360-159-1

Status
Published Version; reviewed

Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.