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Research Articles

The 2014 Walrus Haul Out: A Case Study of Selective Exposure to Environmental News Coverage

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Pages 63-74 | Received 19 May 2015, Accepted 17 Jan 2016, Published online: 26 Oct 2016
 

ABSTRACT

In this article we examine in real time the political selective exposure process involved when the public confronted the “walrus haul out” of October 2014, a news event attributed by some climate change researchers to the effects of the climate change-driven reduction of Arctic sea ice. Analyzing data assessing the amount of major TV and cable news network coverage of the haul out, and evaluating public opinion data collected from a rolling cross-sectional survey of US adults take at the time, we show that coverage of this event was not equitably distributed across news media news sources, that exposure to news source is related to the respondents’ ideological dispositions, and that exposure to coverage of the walrus haul out is related to ideology, the selectivity of political news habits, and climate change knowledge. We conclude with a discussion of the apparent inevitability of selective exposure to media coverage of climate change-related events and the implications for effective climate change communication.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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