Reporting on the Environmental Crisis - Investigating Solutions-Focused Journalism in Swedish News Media
Abstract
Aim/research
problem:
Given the urgency of the Triple Planetary Crisis and the rising phenomenon of news
avoidance, it has become increasingly important to examine how news media
address these dual challenges. This study contributes to the growing field of
solutions-focused journalism by analysing how such reporting is manifested in
Swedish mainstream environmental news coverage. It further investigated what
types of solutions were prioritised and how the reporting aligned with normative
ideals of journalism.
Theory: The study applied theories of solutions-focused journalism and normative ideals of
journalism (accuracy, objectivity, and scrutiny). The findings were further discussed
through the lenses of agenda-setting theory, culturally resonant frames and
dominant paradigms, and journalism’s role in democratic societies (monitoring,
facilitative, and radical).
Methods: A quantitative content analysis was conducted on news articles reporting on the
Triple Planetary Crisis. The analysis focused on the prevalence of solutions-focused
journalism, the types of solutions presented, and how these were reported in terms
of tone, evidence, critical examination, and level of agreement.
Material: The material consisted of news articles published between October 1, 2024, and
February 28, 2025, in the Swedish mainstream news media outlets SVT Nyheter,
Dagens Nyheter, and Svenska Dagbladet. The sample included text-format material
from articles in web and print formats.
Results: (1) Solutions-focused journalism constituted a minority of Swedish news media’s
reporting of the Triple Planetary Crisis. (2) Prominent solutions concerned policy,
and technology, and to some extent business strategies, while solutions related to
individual behaviour and collective action were underrepresented. (3) Solutions
were typically reported with positive tones, vague evidence, and limited critical
examination, although they frequently portrayed solutions as part of a conflict. (4)
The salience and framing of solutions reflected a preference for culturally resonant
narratives aligned with dominant paradigms, which leaves the public with a limited
set of frames for understanding the Triple Planetary Crisis. (5) The reporting style
raises concerns for journalism’s ability to uphold its normative ideals and challenge
the role of journalism in democratic societies.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
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Date
2025-07-01Author
Ekblom, Klara
Keywords
solutions journalism
environmental journalism
the Triple Planetary Crisis
Culturally resonant frames
the Dominant Social Paradigm
journalistic norms
content analysis
Sweden
Series/Report no.
MS113
Language
eng