
Climate change news audiences: Analysis of news use and attitudes in eight countries
This report presents fresh insights into how people access climate news in Brazil, France, Germany, India, Japan, Pakistan, the UK and the US. One of our findings is that people who use climate change news on a weekly basis are more likely to think that people are being affected by climate change now.
- Explore sections on: news use | misinformation | climate protests | health impacts | climate justice
- Listen to a podcast episode about the research
- Learn more about the Oxford Climate Journalism Network and its members
- Read this essays series on how to fix climate journalism
- Check out the Global South Climate Database
- Explore our research
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Breaks, grief and community: how to protect yourself when sifting through graphic visuals

BBC senior verification expert on debunking Israel-Hamas war visuals: “The volume was beyond anything I’ve ever seen”

Why Tucker Carlson interviewed the eccentric frontrunner of Argentina’s election

Five burned out journalists on why they left their dream jobs

A Kremlin mouthpiece at the heart of Africa: how Afrique Média helps Putin court audiences in their own language

As Pakistan approaches a crucial election, its media watchdog bans critical voices from TV

AI and journalism: What's next?

How a young sports news site published a crucial scoop that brought down Rubiales

“It won’t stop at Kashmir,” says a senior editor about a key news site being blocked

A WhatsApp course taught older Spaniards to spot misinformation and it worked

Tips from the author of AP guidelines on how to cover AI

African podcasters are now recognised globally. Can they transform this success into a viable business?

Tips from the author of AP guidelines on how to cover AI

The year-long fight of a Filipino news site against red-tagging and state censorship

Journalists punched, kicked and tear gassed: inside ‘the darkest month for Kenyan media’

“Politicians across Africa use social media to target their critics. Platforms are complicit”

These voices from Peru and Kenya explain how they deliver the news on TikTok

As Cambodia approaches a crucial election, journalists suffer shutdowns and abuse

Indian TV channels show the live shooting of convicted criminals. What does it say about the medium?

How to keep doing journalism with press freedom under siege: five tips from India and Hungary

How the BBC fact-checks celebrity deaths (and other prominent news stories)

Born on Facebook, The Queer Muslim Project reaches LGBTQIA+ audiences in Asia and beyond

Despite abuse and sexism, women journalists in Somalia are fighting back to do their job

How Bellingcat collects, verifies and archives digital evidence of war crimes in Ukraine

A matter of life and death: the dangers of being a journalist in Somalia today

Will AI-generated images create a new crisis for fact-checkers? Experts are not so sure

Is ChatGPT a threat or an opportunity for journalism? Five AI experts weigh in

How The Marshall Project uses Reddit to reach new, underserved audiences

Forced out from print and airwaves, news media in Venezuela shift to digital to survive

This newspaper covers health and science in Swahili for local audiences in Tanzania

This newspaper removes reporters from their beats for months to create multimedia projects

Before global outlets paid attention, this small site had been digging into Adani Group for years despite lawsuits and threats

“As we cover the Nigerian elections, we should be truthful, factual and accurate”

How a Spanish startup became the second biggest European news publisher on TikTok

The most dangerous place to be a journalist is not an active war zone but Latin America

How a newspaper and a museum partnered to create a project on the Dutch colonial past

Inside the attack on Brazil’s Capitol, where reporters were chased, insulted and beaten

How RFE/RL avoids censorship by reaching audiences on Telegram in Russia and Iran

Explore the Digital News Report 2023
This year's report offers new insights on social media, news avoidance and reader revenue, and explores how news participation has evolved over the years. | Read the executive summary | Download a PDF version | Watch our video summary | Explore the report in hundreds of slides | Watch our launch events
- Our podcast episode on the report featuring Nic Newman and Rasmus Nielsen. | Listen on: Spotify | Apple | Google
On algorithms and news
By Richard Fletcher
On the evolution of news participation
By Kirsten Eddy
On the sources and drivers of media criticism
By Craig T. Robertson
On the importance of public service media
By Rasmus Nielsen and Richard Fletcher
On the reach of news podcasts
By Nic Newman
Explore data from your country
Europe
Asia Pacific
North America
Latin America
Africa
Read this essay series from members of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network

Newsrooms should develop a mental health strategy to help climate journalists cope

To cover climate change well, journalists must be prepared to identify what misinformation looks like

When it comes to “green” finance, journalists must be willing to dig behind the jargon

Climate journalists need to connect the dots between climate change and the invasion of Ukraine

To cover the aftermath of extreme disasters, journalists must start covering what we cannot rebuild

To cover climate change in resource-strapped newsrooms, journalists need to embrace collaboration

To report fully on climate change, journalists need to integrate Indigenous knowledge into their coverage

To cover climate change, journalists need to find creative ways to fund long-term reporting

Climate journalists need persistence to get good data, including from governments

To make climate change resonate with audiences, connect it to their heritage and culture

Journalists should help audiences understand extreme weather – even when they lack climate data
Our Journalist Fellowships are an opportunity for journalists to work on a project and spend time in Oxford along with colleagues from around the world.
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As the industry changes, we track the ever-shifting trends, aiming to connect rigorous academic research with the practical experiences of professional journalists, media managers and policy-makers.
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