Several early studies into the media's reporting on climate change in Africa have been completed, suggesting common threads in the kinds of coverage that are emerging. These include a lack of training in the newsroom, editorial disinterest in climate change, poor coverage of local impacts, and a low level of scientific understanding. While the climate change story can be considered a ‘new’ story for African journalists, this author suggests that the challenges it presents have been encountered before – specifically in the coverage of HIV/Aids. The author argues that both climate change and HIV/Aids present systemic challenges to news production, given that they share important characteristics, such as a difficult and unsettled science, the influence of the political, the need to interpret at times complex impacts on society, and a sense of social or humanitarian urgency. These drivers come into conflict with under-resourced newsrooms and a news agenda that is ill equipped to deal...
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