The State of Environmental Journalism in Germany and Russia

Authors

  • Angelina Davydova

Keywords:

Environmental journalism, UN, climate change, sustainability, green media, NGO, green economy, UNFCCC, new media

Abstract

In the last few years I have been intensively reporting on all major UN Conferences on climate change/green economy/sustainable development issues both in Russian and German media. This type of reporting, which connects themes about the environment, politics and business might be rather new to a Russian readership, as environmental journalism is just beginning to take root in the Russian media landscape. The challenges I faced confirm this assumption and include the following issues: the distance and abstractness of global issues, lack of strong political decisions and commitments, problems referring to future issues which might seem less relevant at the moment, turning complex and diverse information into linear stories, contradictory scientific research data, and many others. At the same time, in many ways, environmental journalism in Germany is quite different than in Russia – not only because media landscapes and media markets differentiate (including political and economical prerequisites), but also because the theme of sustainability has a completely different meaning and importance in political, business and social contexts. In this article I will compare environmental reporting, mostly on UN-related events, in Russian and German media, in an attempt to outline both similarities and differences between the two media markets.

Author Biography

Angelina Davydova

Angelina Davydova, born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1978. M.A. in Economics from the St. Petersburg State University of Economics and Finance. Since 1999 working in Russian media (including Kommersant newspaper, Expert magazine, The St. Petersburg Times, etc). Reuters Foundation Fellow in 2006 at Green College, Oxford University. From 2006 till now project manager with the NGO “German-Russian Exchange”, head of media trainings and journalistic exchange programs. Since 2008 a leading expert with the Russian-German Office of Environmental Information. From 2011 senior lecturer and postgraduate researcher at the School of Journalism, St. Petersburg State University. June-July 2012 participation in an Environmental Leadership Program, College of Natural Resources, University of California Berkeley. Takes part in the UNFCCC process since 2008 as an observer and/or journalist.

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How to Cite

Davydova, A. (2013). The State of Environmental Journalism in Germany and Russia. Global Media Journal - German Edition, 3(1). Retrieved from https://globalmediajournal.de/index.php/gmj/article/view/109