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The Fukushima Disaster and the "Clash of Risk Cultures": Japanese and German Journalists' Perceptions of a Nuclear Crisis
[journal article]
Abstract The article examines how nuclear risk was perceived by German and Japanese journalists covering the Fukushima Disaster. Drawing from the theoretical framework of Beck's World Risk Society, the journalists' personal risk perceptions are reconstructed from narrative interviews, adding an important var... view more
The article examines how nuclear risk was perceived by German and Japanese journalists covering the Fukushima Disaster. Drawing from the theoretical framework of Beck's World Risk Society, the journalists' personal risk perceptions are reconstructed from narrative interviews, adding an important variable to the understanding of journalistic communication on risk and disaster. The results indicate that German correspondents in Japan were highly concerned about their personal safety while Japanese journalists hardly showed any anxiety with regard to the nuclear disaster. The varying perceptions also widely applied to the journalists' professional experience of the disaster, although further influences like organizational culture came into play as well. The article concludes that historically shaped discourses are an important macro factor for media reporting on risk and disaster.... view less
Keywords
disaster; crisis communication; risk communication; journalism; risk society; reporting
Classification
Communicator Research, Journalism
Free Keywords
Nuclear disaster; comparative research
Document language
English
Publication Year
2019
Journal
Global Media Journal - German Edition, 9 (2019) 2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.22032/dbt.40623
ISSN
2196-4807
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed