Portrayal of scientific controversy on climate change. A study of the coverage of the Copenhagen summit in the Spanish press

Authors

  • Bienvenido León University of Navarra
  • Maria Carmen Erviti University of Navarra

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15847/obsOBS532011503

Keywords:

climate change, science communication, environmental journalism, controversy, balance, journalistic values

Abstract

Controversy has been a relevant element in the coverage of climate change. Several studies emphasize the influence of economic, political, and journalistic factors in the portrayal of controversies on this topic, along the last few decades. Very often this was related to the lobbying action of several political and economic interest groups and resulted in the portrayal of a distorted image of the scientific knowledge on this topic. This paper presents some results of a research project on information about climate change in the Spanish media (*). It analyzes the role of controversy in the current situation of strong scientific consensus on the existence and origin of climate change, through some content analysis of the coverage of the Copenhagen summit on climate change, in December 2009, in the two leading Spanish newspapers (El País and El Mundo). Results indicate that controversy still plays a relevant role in the coverage of this topic, and it is related to the editorial line of each newspaper. When controversy receives ample attention, it is portrayed mainly by means of opinion articles and it is linked to a restrictive presence of the scientific point of view. Balance is used as a legitimization tool, when it is useful to support the editorial line.

Author Biography

Bienvenido León, University of Navarra

Associate Professor School of Public Communication University of Navarra

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Published

2011-10-03

How to Cite

León, B., & Erviti, M. C. (2011). Portrayal of scientific controversy on climate change. A study of the coverage of the Copenhagen summit in the Spanish press. Observatorio (OBS*), 5(3). https://doi.org/10.15847/obsOBS532011503

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Section

Articles