From Megan Cattel <[email protected]>
Subject Want to improve your climate change reporting? Start with these tips
Date August 31, 2023 2:00 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The effects of climate change can no longer be ignored.

August 2023
[link removed]
[link removed]
A firefighter cries near a wildfire in the Losacio area in Spain, July 17, 2022. Firefighters battled wildfires raging out of control in Spain and France as Europe wilted under an unusually extreme heat wave Emilio Fraile/Europa Press via AP

After decades of global inaction, the effects of climate change can no longer be ignored. As I sit down to write this newsletter, friends of mine are evacuating in Vancouver to escape raging ([link removed]) , disastrous wildfires ([link removed]) . Meanwhile, Hurricane Idalia ([link removed]) is ripping through the panhandle of Florida, my home state, bringing intense flooding to the region.

The convergence of record-breaking temperatures, devastating wildfires, and historic floods have become our new normal each summer. Now, journalists are tasked with contextualizing the root causes of extreme climate events and documenting the impact these disasters are having all around the world. How can governments, the private sector, and ordinary citizens get on the same page when it comes to environmental protections and solutions? How can telling better climate stories move the needle toward collective action and urgency?

Below is a compilation of pieces from Nieman Reports contributors about best practices for improving climate coverage. The stories below all provide sharp analysis and practical tips to apply to your reporting. We hope they prove useful as you and your newsroom navigate the climate crisis and work to bring accurate, actionable information to your audiences.

Until next time,
Megan Cattel
Interim Audience Engagement Editor

Five Tips for Better Coverage of the Climate Crisis ([link removed]) : Focus on relevance to everyday life, include all beats, emphasize potential solutions, highlight visual media/infographics, and make it local.
* Biggest takeaway: Coverage will vary depending on your audience, beat, and newsroom type (local vs. national vs. global), but these five tips by James Painter and Shannon Osaka offer guidance to reporters of all skill levels.

Everyone Is a Climate Reporter Now ([link removed]) : That’s why journalism schools need to incorporate climate science reporting into their standard curricula.
* Biggest takeaway: “The goal of climate communication is to not only educate about the science and impacts but also to promote action and change social norms,” writes Jill Hopke, associate professor of journalism at DePaul University, where she teaches climate change communication and climate journalism. In this piece, Hopke discusses how to broach the topics of “science and data literacy, as well as practice applying news gathering and verification skills to the social equity, economic, and political aspects of the climate crisis” in classrooms.

As Journalists, We Need to Change the Way We Cover Disasters ([link removed]) : We need fewer tragic narratives about survivors, and more stories about the causes of coastal disasters and who benefits from government rebuilding grants.
* Biggest takeaway: “Not every reporter needs to be in the field looking for tragic narratives about survivors…all too often the stories feel reflexive and waste limited time and resources that could be spent on deeper reporting that gets at the root causes of coastal disasters, especially land use choices, which rarely are covered until it’s too late,” writes Gilbert M. Gaul, a former reporter for The Washington Post, on how to utilize public records to see how government money is spent on disaster recovery and infrastructure development.

Climate Coverage that Engages Audiences Without Overwhelming Them ([link removed]) : Use infrared photography, virtual reality, and other reporting techniques to make visible the unseen causes of the climate crisis.
* Biggest takeaway: The most distinctive and engaging stories about climate change are “visual, multimedia, interactive, employing a multiplicity of tools to immerse readers in the enormity of the issue while at the same time personalizing it to each reader, viewer, or user.” See what visual techniques have the most impact in this piece by Michael Blanding.

How Rising Temperatures Are Becoming a Labor Story ([link removed]) : Labor reporters are increasingly focusing on how extreme heat kills workers — and what should be done about it.
* Biggest takeaway: “Extreme heat often sneaks up on workers and can be deadly. A handful of media organizations have taken a close look at the problem.” In one of our most-read climate stories, reporter Steven Greenhouse takes readers into the devastating, but overlooked problem of farmers working in extreme, life-threatening heat. As temperatures rise, more essential workers who work outdoors will be affected.

[link removed]


** Journalists Need More Training in the Art of Negotiation ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------

Internships and journalism schools should give their students the tools they need to push for transparency and fairness in the hiring process

Read more ([link removed])

[link removed]


** A Dangerous Flight in ISIS Territory ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------

Moises Saman, NF ’23, on documenting the desperation of the Iraq war

Read more ([link removed])

[link removed]


** Tending to the Details ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------

As newsrooms hollow out and deepfakes become more prevalent, the need for mentors is greater than ever

Read more ([link removed])


** More from Nieman Foundation publications:
------------------------------------------------------------

[link removed]
Sally Jenkins on her intimate interview with Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert ([link removed])

The Washington Post columnist used decades of trust and "sincere curiosity" to talk to the tennis greats about rivalry, cancer and friendship.

Read more from Nieman Storyboard ([link removed]) . ([link removed])

[link removed]
The Daily Tar Heel's shooting coverage is just the latest example of college newspapers taking on a local reporting role ([link removed])

As local papers continue to vanish, student journalists are stepping up to fill an important community role. Around 10% of capital statehouse reporters in 2022 were students, Pew found last year.

Read more from Nieman Lab ([link removed]) . ([link removed])
Read more from Nieman Reports ([link removed])
View this email in your browser. ([link removed])

============================================================
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
Copyright © 2023 Nieman Reports, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to the Nieman Reports email newsletter.

Our mailing address is:
Nieman Reports
1 Francis Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02138
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Nieman Reports
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • MailChimp