MEDIA FRAMING AND ENVIRONMENTAL (IN)JUSTICE Construction of the 2019 Brazilian Amazon fires in national and international news
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Date
2024-07-04
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Abstract
In August 2019, large numbers of fires in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest caught international 
political and media attention, often alluding to their global climatic significance. The local 
situation however is complexly entangled with various local and global socioeconomic 
processes that lead to the disproportionate environmental impact on local communities. 
Considering the media’s importance in public problem-perceptions and policy-making, this 
study is thus concerned with the framing of the events and local populations in the Brazilian 
Folha de São Paulo (FSP) and international New York Times (NYT) in late August 2019, and 
discusses its findings within a framework of environmental justice. The results of the 
qualitative, abductive framing analysis show that both newspapers mainly construct the fires 
within political frames. Both FSP and NYT omit frames of justice and rarely highlight 
implications for the local population, instead focusing on international political, environmental, 
conflictual and economic aspects. The newspapers frequently thematize local farming and 
Brazilian economic policies as drivers of the fires, while neglecting global responsibilities in 
economic, climatic, or post-colonial terms. I argue that this does not only overlook issues of 
distributive and restorative environmental justice, but also constitutes a form of environmental 
injustice itself with regard to recognition and representation, hence perpetuating existing 
inequalities. Therefore, I identify the need for stronger consideration of human aspects, local 
particularities and interactions with the global in environmental media reporting on the 
Amazon.
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Keywords
News Framing, Environmental Justice, Brazil, Amazon, Fires, Local  Communities, Global Studies, Scales