2011
DOI: 10.1177/1748048510386744
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Acclimatizing nuclear? Climate change, nuclear power and the reframing of risk in the UK news media

Abstract: In January 2008, the UK Labour government announced that new nuclear power would play a role in the generation of low carbon electricity, and thus in the mitigation of climate change. This reframing of new nuclear power as a means of tackling climate change signalled a dramatic U-turn on Labour’s commitment to decommission all existing UK nuclear power stations by 2025. In the context of the political reframing of new nuclear builds, this article examines how the UK news media contributed to the reframing of n… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…In 2008 the UK government announced the assigning of a central role to nuclear power in transforming the power sector. The UK media actively contributed to reframing nuclear power as a climate friendly technology (Doyle, 2011).…”
Section: Case Study -Fukushima Nuclear Power and The Renewable Energmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2008 the UK government announced the assigning of a central role to nuclear power in transforming the power sector. The UK media actively contributed to reframing nuclear power as a climate friendly technology (Doyle, 2011).…”
Section: Case Study -Fukushima Nuclear Power and The Renewable Energmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since then, media coverage of climate change has improved, with a shift from occasional to routine coverage of climate issues and reporting that contextualizes opposing viewpoints (Brüggemann, 2017). Understandably, several studies of climate change media coverage have focused on how policy solutions are portrayed by the media (Doyle, 2011;Liu, Robinson, & Vedlitz, 2016).…”
Section: Media Coverage Of the United Nations Conference Of The Partiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A greater proportion of nuclear electricity in the future energy mix is supported by all leading political parties (with the exception of the Green Party), partly on the environmental grounds that it is 'low-carbon' but more reliable than wind and solar power, the principal renewable alternatives favoured by most environmentalists. The climate change argument has a long pedigree in Britain, having been introduced by Conservative Prime Minister Thatcher in 1988 (Doyle, 2011). However, it was a Labour government that committed Britain to a new generation of nuclear power stations (BERR, 2008) after the long post-Chernobyl hiatus.…”
Section: Policy and Public Opinion In The Ukmentioning
confidence: 99%