It is widely acknowledged within the risk literature that the mass media play a pivotal role in shaping information about risk events for audiences. While some risk events reflect occurrences specific to particular times and locations, other risk events are more difficult to temporally and spatially situate as they are dispersed across years or months and are not constrained to particular geographic locations. Studies examining the relationship between the social amplification or attenuation of risks and their framing in the media have tended to focus on the former type of event. In this paper, we explore the social amplification of risk in relation to ash dieback disease (Hymenoscyphus fraxineus), a tree health issue that attracted intense...
Invasive species can spread to new landscapes through various anthropogenic factors and negatively i...
Ash dieback is a fungal disease (causal agent Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) infecting Common ash (Fraxinu...
The growing incidence of new tree pest and disease epidemics, many of them with the potential to rad...
It is widely acknowledged within the risk literature that the mass media play a pivotal role in shap...
It has long been recognised that the traditional media play a key role in representing risk and are ...
The Social Amplification of Risk Framework (SARF) is often used as a conceptual tool for studying di...
Why did the identification of ‘Ash Dieback’ (Chalara Fraxinea) in 2012 in the UK catch the national ...
The Social Amplification of Risk Framework (SARF) is often used as a conceptual tool for studying di...
This paper seeks to address the need for a more nuanced understanding of public perceptions of risk-...
British news media were central to the amplification of health risk concerns in the late 1990s and e...
Protecting tree and plant health remains a concern firmly embedded in the science-based, technocrati...
This paper seeks to address the need for a more nuanced understanding of public perceptions of risk-...
This paper analyses the post‐political nature of the discourse of plant biosecurity in the context o...
This study reviews how the issue of ash dieback has been placed on the political agenda in the UK, a...
Ash dieback is a fungal disease (causal agent Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) infecting Common ash (Fraxinu...
Invasive species can spread to new landscapes through various anthropogenic factors and negatively i...
Ash dieback is a fungal disease (causal agent Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) infecting Common ash (Fraxinu...
The growing incidence of new tree pest and disease epidemics, many of them with the potential to rad...
It is widely acknowledged within the risk literature that the mass media play a pivotal role in shap...
It has long been recognised that the traditional media play a key role in representing risk and are ...
The Social Amplification of Risk Framework (SARF) is often used as a conceptual tool for studying di...
Why did the identification of ‘Ash Dieback’ (Chalara Fraxinea) in 2012 in the UK catch the national ...
The Social Amplification of Risk Framework (SARF) is often used as a conceptual tool for studying di...
This paper seeks to address the need for a more nuanced understanding of public perceptions of risk-...
British news media were central to the amplification of health risk concerns in the late 1990s and e...
Protecting tree and plant health remains a concern firmly embedded in the science-based, technocrati...
This paper seeks to address the need for a more nuanced understanding of public perceptions of risk-...
This paper analyses the post‐political nature of the discourse of plant biosecurity in the context o...
This study reviews how the issue of ash dieback has been placed on the political agenda in the UK, a...
Ash dieback is a fungal disease (causal agent Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) infecting Common ash (Fraxinu...
Invasive species can spread to new landscapes through various anthropogenic factors and negatively i...
Ash dieback is a fungal disease (causal agent Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) infecting Common ash (Fraxinu...
The growing incidence of new tree pest and disease epidemics, many of them with the potential to rad...