Tree Planting for Climate Change: Coverage in the UK Farming Sector Press

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Tree Planting for Climate Change: Coverage in the UK Farming Sector Press. / Hardaker, Ashley; Bodner, Theresa; Dandy, Norman.
Yn: Journal of Rural Studies, Cyfrol 94, 01.08.2022, t. 140-149.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Hardaker A, Bodner T, Dandy N. Tree Planting for Climate Change: Coverage in the UK Farming Sector Press. Journal of Rural Studies. 2022 Awst 1;94:140-149. Epub 2022 Meh 27. doi: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.06.001

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Hardaker, Ashley ; Bodner, Theresa ; Dandy, Norman. / Tree Planting for Climate Change: Coverage in the UK Farming Sector Press. Yn: Journal of Rural Studies. 2022 ; Cyfrol 94. tt. 140-149.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tree Planting for Climate Change: Coverage in the UK Farming Sector Press

AU - Hardaker, Ashley

AU - Bodner, Theresa

AU - Dandy, Norman

PY - 2022/8/1

Y1 - 2022/8/1

N2 - In recent years tree planting as a response to climate change has acquired a very high profile amongst policy-makers, scientists, the media, and the public. This ‘afforestation’, however, requires space: that is, land. Agriculture currently occupies very large areas of land globally meaning that it is commonly targeted as needing to make way for tree planting, and making farmers important gatekeepers to this climate change mitigation strategy. Given the importance of farming sector media outlets in reflecting, shaping and leading values and attitudes amongst the agricultural community, this paper investigates how tree planting is presented within the UK's two leading sectoral publications, Farmers Guardian and Farmers Weekly. We sample coverage at four points over a two-year period (2019–2021) which began with high-profile national media and scientific engagement with the topic. Our analysis reveals very low levels of coverage within these key publications with, on average, just 1 in 200 articles within our sample focussing on tree planting. Within this limited coverage we identify four themes which range from hostility towards the notion of trees on farms replacing agricultural practices, through to occasional recognition of the positive roles that trees on farms can play in climate change mitigation. Arguably, the lack of legitimisation within the coverage constitutes a significant barrier to woodland expansion on agricultural land. We conclude that farming media outlets could play a much stronger role in supporting the agricultural community to understand how it could contribute to climate change mitigation through bringing trees ‘in’ to farming systems, and to the normalisation of this within modern farming culture.

AB - In recent years tree planting as a response to climate change has acquired a very high profile amongst policy-makers, scientists, the media, and the public. This ‘afforestation’, however, requires space: that is, land. Agriculture currently occupies very large areas of land globally meaning that it is commonly targeted as needing to make way for tree planting, and making farmers important gatekeepers to this climate change mitigation strategy. Given the importance of farming sector media outlets in reflecting, shaping and leading values and attitudes amongst the agricultural community, this paper investigates how tree planting is presented within the UK's two leading sectoral publications, Farmers Guardian and Farmers Weekly. We sample coverage at four points over a two-year period (2019–2021) which began with high-profile national media and scientific engagement with the topic. Our analysis reveals very low levels of coverage within these key publications with, on average, just 1 in 200 articles within our sample focussing on tree planting. Within this limited coverage we identify four themes which range from hostility towards the notion of trees on farms replacing agricultural practices, through to occasional recognition of the positive roles that trees on farms can play in climate change mitigation. Arguably, the lack of legitimisation within the coverage constitutes a significant barrier to woodland expansion on agricultural land. We conclude that farming media outlets could play a much stronger role in supporting the agricultural community to understand how it could contribute to climate change mitigation through bringing trees ‘in’ to farming systems, and to the normalisation of this within modern farming culture.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.06.001

DO - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.06.001

M3 - Article

VL - 94

SP - 140

EP - 149

JO - Journal of Rural Studies

JF - Journal of Rural Studies

SN - 0743-0167

ER -