Environmental journalism, by and large, reflects not just news of the day (and an underlying theme) but also the zeitgeist. For example, when I made ecology my beat in the late 1990s, stories about the biodiversity crisis were prevalent in mainstream media and in environmental magazines--one of which I worked at through most of the 2000s. In my current feature story on the divide in the conservation community, I have a historical section on the roots of environmental conservation. There, I talk about a progression in ecology--evolving primary concerns over a 100-year period, from wilderness preservation and endangered species to biodiversity and ecosystem services. Of course, ecology is a huge field with many sub-disciplines. What I'm referring to are issues that were picked up in the media and frequently covered, which helped them gain traction as popular causes. This does not happen in a vacuum. Influential thought leaders and vocal ...
When Ecology and Values Become Entangled
Explore how environmental journalism shapes public understanding of biodiversity and the conservation community's fight against species loss.
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