This article examines selected print media coverage of a domestic natural disaster and domestic industrial failure in each of three Westminster countries: Australia, Canada, and the UK. It studies this coverage from several perspectives: the volume of coverage; the rate at which the articles were published; the tone of the headlines; and a content analysis of the perceived performance of key public and private institutions during and following the events. Its initial findings reveal that the natural disasters received more coverage than the industrial failures in each of the newspapers considered. There was also no significant difference in the publication rate across event type or newspaper. In each case, government was assessed at least a...
Despite an increasing willingness among academics politicians, policymakers, non-governmental organi...
While natural hazards have never been so frequent in modern history, the political economy of disast...
These days people keep wondering whether the world is more dangerous now than it was before. Do natu...
This article examines selected print media coverage of a domestic natural disaster and domestic indu...
While natural hazards have never been so frequent in modern history, the political economy of disast...
Using the 2004 Southeast Asian tsunami as a case study, this paper considers how natural disasters a...
Based on a comparative approach, this article reports content analyses of news articles about a deva...
After the Burma cyclone and the China quake we all realised how vital the media was in reporting dis...
Focusing on the 2010 rescue of Chilean miners, this article problematizes some current perspectives ...
As a result of climate change, technological development, and other variables, natural and technolog...
This article reviews three case studies in the Australian media reporting of international humanitar...
In the present age of globalization, people primarily learn about international disasters through gl...
In recent decades, academic researchers of natural disasters and emergency management have dev...
This study explores how the media frame disaster contingency plans which include preparedness, mitig...
This article examines how three Chinese and two British newspapers sourced content from social media...
Despite an increasing willingness among academics politicians, policymakers, non-governmental organi...
While natural hazards have never been so frequent in modern history, the political economy of disast...
These days people keep wondering whether the world is more dangerous now than it was before. Do natu...
This article examines selected print media coverage of a domestic natural disaster and domestic indu...
While natural hazards have never been so frequent in modern history, the political economy of disast...
Using the 2004 Southeast Asian tsunami as a case study, this paper considers how natural disasters a...
Based on a comparative approach, this article reports content analyses of news articles about a deva...
After the Burma cyclone and the China quake we all realised how vital the media was in reporting dis...
Focusing on the 2010 rescue of Chilean miners, this article problematizes some current perspectives ...
As a result of climate change, technological development, and other variables, natural and technolog...
This article reviews three case studies in the Australian media reporting of international humanitar...
In the present age of globalization, people primarily learn about international disasters through gl...
In recent decades, academic researchers of natural disasters and emergency management have dev...
This study explores how the media frame disaster contingency plans which include preparedness, mitig...
This article examines how three Chinese and two British newspapers sourced content from social media...
Despite an increasing willingness among academics politicians, policymakers, non-governmental organi...
While natural hazards have never been so frequent in modern history, the political economy of disast...
These days people keep wondering whether the world is more dangerous now than it was before. Do natu...