chapter-iii print media and environment these...

37
CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT 3.1 Environmental Issues and media's response These days Climate Change issues are the getting the highest priority and making the headlines in print and electronic media. Governments and the people depend on Communication and Mass Media not only for disseminating information, but also in setting agenda for the development and other allied activities. Thus, communication media become powerful tool for disseminating information and diffusion of innovations. Due to depletion of natural resources and burning of fossil fuels there is a great threat to environment. It is high time to save the depleting natural resources and discourage the irrational usage of natural resources by focusing on Sustainable Development. Media has the power of focusing the factors that cause environmental problems as well as adverse impact on people. The environmental problems, which threaten the present day existence as well as the future of humanity, are brought to peoples notice by the media. Some of these 3 issues are really quiet alarming and need to be focused upon, so that people can be made aware of their intensity. Straight reports, discussions, photo features and articles by experts help in informing the people about different aspects of climate change issue. The layman may not be able to assess the impact of many of the environmental problems persisting around them. The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term effect on global warming, poses threat of melting ice caps in the polar region. The inducing rise in sea level and extinction of all species of living beings on earth cannot be comprehended in full measure by everybody. If media attempts to educate the masses on such vital issues, at least, the intelligent and right-thinking people will become aware about the need to take the precautionary measures and they get sensitized towards the natural resource conservation and protection. Media acts as a catalyst in enlightening the masses on issues related to climate change. A few issues, on which global media reporting widely are global warming, green peace movement, depletion of ozone layer, climate change, green house gases effect, acid rain etc. It was seen that most of these problems are caused by the random destruction of nature and its resources, created by the 72 I P a g e

Upload: tranthien

Post on 12-Mar-2018

216 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

CHAPTER-III

PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT

3.1 Environmental Issues and media's response

These days Climate Change issues are the getting the highest priority and

making the headlines in print and electronic media. Governments and the people

depend on Communication and Mass Media not only for disseminating

information, but also in setting agenda for the development and other allied

activities. Thus, communication media become powerful tool for disseminating

information and diffusion of innovations. Due to depletion of natural resources

and burning of fossil fuels there is a great threat to environment. It is high time to

save the depleting natural resources and discourage the irrational usage of natural

resources by focusing on Sustainable Development.

Media has the power of focusing the factors that cause environmental

problems as well as adverse impact on people. The environmental problems, which

threaten the present day existence as well as the future of humanity, are brought to

peoples notice by the media. Some of these 3 issues are really quiet alarming and

need to be focused upon, so that people can be made aware of their intensity. Straight

reports, discussions, photo features and articles by experts help in informing the

people about different aspects of climate change issue. The layman may not be able

to assess the impact of many of the environmental problems persisting around them.

The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term effect on global warming,

poses threat of melting ice caps in the polar region. The inducing rise in sea level and

extinction of all species of living beings on earth cannot be comprehended in full

measure by everybody. If media attempts to educate the masses on such vital issues,

at least, the intelligent and right-thinking people will become aware about the need to

take the precautionary measures and they get sensitized towards the natural resource

conservation and protection.

Media acts as a catalyst in enlightening the masses on issues related to

climate change. A few issues, on which global media reporting widely are global

warming, green peace movement, depletion of ozone layer, climate change, green

house gases effect, acid rain etc. It was seen that most of these problems are

caused by the random destruction of nature and its resources, created by the

72 I P a g e

Page 2: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

irresponsible lifestyle of human beings. A section of the media has drawn our

attention on several environmental issues like Ganga River Action Plan, Chipko

Movement, Narmada Bachavo Andolan and Appiko Movement at national level

and all the waves of these movements were kept alive mainly by the coverage in

various media. Of course, there are quite a good number of regional issues at the

regional level covered by vernacular media.

These days varieties of environmental issues are getting priority with

special reference to the global warming and climate change problems. In Africa

"Climate change" remains a new terminology to most journalists and media

professionals. This new terminology reflects the real situation in most media

houses in Sub-Saharan Africa where governments lack resources and proper

mechanisms to engage journalists in campaigning on impacts of climate change

in respective countries. South Africa was found • to be the exception where

considerable reporting has been done on the impacts of climate change. Specially,

Print media, which is still dominant and most influential compared to electronic

media (internet, radio, television, blogs, etc.). In Africa, has so far played a

leading role in educating and informing the public on effects of environmental

deterioration and related human impacts. There have been a remarkable number

of articles and media releases on the impacts of climate change despite all the

hurdles were faced by the journalists. In Tanzania, there have been a number of

articles on climate-change impacts, but most of them are not on a regular basis as

compared with sports and political news. In 1998 effects of El Nino reflected the

most coverage in Tanzanian and East African newspapers. A number of articles

were published in several newspapers including the Daily Nation (Kenya), The

Standard (Kenya), Daily News (Tanzania), The Guardian (Tanzania), The East

African (East Africa) and the popular Kiswahili newspapers, all reflecting the

negative effects of the rains in most parts of the East African region. The

journalists did not relate the El Nino rains with climate change, but took the rains

as part of common weather variations. People in East Africa did not have any

idea that could warn them and the public that "EI Nino rains were the effects of

climate change. In the year of 1999, most of the network news stories on global

warming carried a current event-oriented news peg such as: the warm weather of

winter 1998 (CBS June 2, 1999); the effect on insects and natural disasters (CBS

73 I P a g e

Page 3: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

June 24, 1999); higher temperatures and more extreme weather (NBC and CBS

June 29, 1999); and melting ice (ABC December 3, 1999). Network television

news stories generally appeared to accept the existence of global warming as an

every day phenomenon that can be measured in terms of current weather

conditions. On July 31, 1999, however, CNN environmental reporter Natalie

Pawelski reminded her viewers that there were scientists on both sides of the heat

wave question by including Jim St. John of Georgia Tech, who "says heat waves

alone are not evidence of global warming" (Vanderbilt University).

In 1989 July 8, CBS mentioned global warming in an economic summit

story, and ABC on August 24, 1989 carried comments on global warming by

actor Robert Redford. The CBS News for September 19, 1989 as part of its

Hurricane Hugo coverage carried a story by reporter David Dow that scientists

were predicting that the greenhouse effect would play a role in creating stronger

and more dangerous hurricanes in the future. Meteorologist Keny Emanuel

presented the theory. Scientist Michael McElroy said action was needed to curtail

global warming. Robert Livezey of the National Meteorological Center disagreed

with the theory. Global warming is a chronic environmental issue. It is a long-

term problem that was about the same last year as it is this year. It measures

temperature changes across decades. It is a stretch for scientists to say that the

greenhouse effect is responsible for higher temperatures in a given year or even

decade and it is an even bigger stretch to propose a theory linking global

warming to the intensity of hurricanes. Journalists are always looking for good

news pegs. In the 1970s and through most of the 1980s, global warming and

greenhouse effect stories were usually chronic environmental science features or

government, political, or congressional hearing stories. But scientific discussions

and government meetings on global warming are neither visual nor dramatic

news pegs. In the 1980s some scientists seemed to be linking the greenhouse

effect to current high temperatures. If this were true - and even if it wasn't - it

gave some reporters a reason to link global warming to the acute, front-page issue

of heat waves. Coverage of global warming increased enormously in the 1990s.

The three television networks carried around one hundred news stories about

global warming from 1990 through 1999 judging by a count of global warming

74 I P a g e

Page 4: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

abstracts from the Vanderbilt News Archive. This compared to a handful of

related stories in the 1970s and about twenty stories in the 1980s, using the same

measure. Global warming was an international political story in the 1990s with

the United Nations Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Brazil in 1992 (featuring the

signing of the UN global warming treaty) and the Kyoto, Japan global warming

conference in 1997. The NBC Evening News of March 29, 1990 carried a 30-

second report that NASA scientists said, "that there has been no long-term global

warming" (Vanderbilt University), but such doubts were not the norm on the

nightly news.

3.2 Print media and environmental issues

Among the other mass media Print media facilitates gigantic opportunity

to the users and also is used to broadcast all the required information. More over

the exclusive charm or practicality of print materials is that the facility of going

back to it, refer to it, read , review and study the all material at your own pace and

convenient time. Referring to different print media specially the environmental

magazines, journals, reports and news stories attempts to focus on the factors that

cause environmental problems as well as the negative effect on people .Print

media also in time to time highlights the environmental problems that threaten

the present day existence as well as the future of humanity and brought to every

bodies notice. Most of these issues are honestly quiet alarming and need to be

focus upon so that people can be made aware of their significance. When any

kind of simple hearing doesn't works straight reports, discussions, photo features

and articles by experts helps in informing the people about different aspects of

each issue and its intensity and works as the trustworthy resources. Print media

can undoubtedly update, educate, warn, inform, and even empower people to take

practical steps to protect themselves from disasters. Not only to reaching

communities that may be beyond the reach of mass media, some other media

types like pamphlets, posters, and books appeal more directly to children and

provide a more interactive and entertaining educational mechanism. Indeed, they

may have an immense and ever lasting impact on the minds of the people.

75 I P a g e

Page 5: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

For about 600 years printing lias been the basic tool of mass communication,

storing and dissemination of information and knowledge. To mention here that

from about the second half of the last century electronic media has somewhat

taken oyer the mass media world by a storm but the print media has not lost its

sheen and its social relevance.

The modern printing in India originated in Goa in 1550 by Spanish Coadjutor,

Brother John de Bustamante, also known as Indian Gutenburg.The first language

printing press with vernacular types was established in 1557 at Vaipicotta.On

January 29, 1780 the first Indian newspaper, the Bengal Gazette, two pages,

twelve inches by eight, popularly known as the Hicky's Gazette was published.

During the later half of the 19th century Anglo- Indian press established firm

foundation in India. In 1861 there were 11 Urdu newspapers and 8 Hindi

newspapers. By 1870 the press in Indian languages was growing rapidly (Future

of India). There were about sixty-two Indian languages newspapers in Bombay,

about sixty in North-West Provinces, Oudh and the Central Provinces, some

twenty-eight in Bengal, about nineteen in Madras (Tamil, Telgu, Malyalam and

Hindustani). There were about 100,000 readers and the highest circulation of any

one newspaper was about 3000. Today the number of newspapers has grown to

99 million copies daily. Indian newspaper sales increased 11.2 percent in 2007

and 35.51 percent in the five year period. Newspaper advertising revenues in

India were up 64.8 percent over the last five years (WAN Report: World Press

Trends 2008)

Although it is found that newspapers are facing hard times, but circulation

world wide increased by 2.57 percent in 2007, taking global daily sales to a new

high of over 532 million copies. The global paid - for circulation world wide

increased 2.57 percent year on year and 9.39 percent over the last five years.

Timothy Balding, chief executive officer of WAN (World Association of

Newspaper), said, " Newspaper circulation has been rising or stable in three

quarters of the World's countries over the past five years and in nearly 80 percent

of countries in the past year." With literacy level rising to approx 551 million

people in India, more people - rural and urban - are reading newspapers and

magazines. The reach of print media has increased to an estimated 316 million

76 I P a g e

Page 6: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

readers. Print media has also attracted tlie global investors with maximum foreign

investment in this segment.

Today in India almost all newspapers are completely accessible through

the Internet and provide up to-date news and information, key changes that can

be expected are in the field of technology used in the printing and the number of

units per each organization. Newspapers are by no means outdated. The

traditional benefits to the reader are palpable, but today's customers expect more.

Newspaper organizations now-a-days recognize themselves as a commercial

enterprise and the newspaper as a commodity, rather an institution to serve the

society

Number of Indian newspapers has remarkably multiplied several folds

since independence and today Indian newspapers are brought out in 93 languages

and dialects. In Debasis's study 2004 it was found that 57% of the interviewed

persons stated to read the newspaper for 30 to 60 minutes per day. It was found

that with an average of about 50 minutes the daily amount of time spent on

reading the newspaper, "the backbone of news" in India, is considerably high. It

was found that illiteracy in India is around 51%. In addition to that, 93% of the

several million copies are sold in the large towns with population over 100.000

which accounts only for 10 percent of the population. Therefore it's been of

much concern that how many articles and news are covered by these newspapers.

The Times of India has forsaken its weekly column after which no paper was

seen to give environmental importance or none of India's daily newspapers has a

regular space reserved for environmental news so that these are only addressed as

government, ministry and legal news as well as in contexts of science or health.

These issues which are to be focused mainly on local and national issues like air,

water and noise pollution as well as deforestation. In contrast to that global

environmental problems are only mentioned very rarely, e.g. if they are the topic

of international conferences. In fact the journalists when used to write anything

on environment is neither an educational or motivational approach nor offering

scientific explanation or background information (exceptions are environmental

issues that are on the top of the political agenda, e.g. CNG (compressed natural

gas)), but it is to inform their readers on the latest trends in political news related

77 I P a g e

Page 7: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

to environment. Providentially some regional dailies have slight tendency

towards a motivational coverage of environmental issues could be observed in the

regional language newspapers, e.g. when enlightening farmers on the negative

consequences of the use of pesticides.

It can be understood that something like most of the highly popularized

newspapers of India like Times of India, The Hindu, Hindustan Times or Indian

Express have an article on environmental issues at least every second day , here

Times of India doing the best job in terms of frequency. The reason for very low

level of coverage on environment can be explained by different reasons: First, the

fairly new field of environmental journalism which starting point was only in

1994 after the Bhopal catastrophe is not considered as an attractive one by

journalists, the majority of the journalists covering environment has been asked

to do so. Of course, there are several environmental journalists who have chosen

their subject out of true commitment, too. Second, environment is competing

with all the other issues covered in the newspaper whereby the most severe

selection criterion is the news worthiness of an issue. The interest of the reader as

far as news on environment is concerned is supposed to be still fairly low by the

editors. A big benchmark has been set up by the India's only environmental

magazine "Down to Earth" which has highlighted all the national international

current global environmental problems about which people are unaware and it

fills an important lack in Indian media and their coverage of environment. This

magazine is a kind of chronology of Indian environmental history which started

in the year of 1992. The main aspect of its approach is not only the coverage of a

broad variety of environment related topics (ranking from policy to science, from

local to global level) and their scientific background, but also the belief that

addressing environmental issues in a developing country like India is not a matter

of luxury, but of pure livelihood and wellbeing.

Print media, which is still dominant and most influential compared to

electronic media (internet, radio, television, blogs, etc.) in Africa, has so far

played a leading role in educating and informing the public on effects of

environmental deterioration and related human impacts. But little has been done

78 I P a g e

Page 8: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

on climate change regardless of all hurdles facing journalists in Sub-Saharan

Africa, there have been a remarkable number of articles and media releases on

the impacts of climate change in Africa. In Tanzania, there have been a number

of articles on climate-change impacts, but most of them are not on a regular basis

as compared with sports and political news. The effects of El Nino rains in 1998

reflected the most coverage in Tanzanian and East African newspapers. A

number of articles were published in several newspapers including the Daily

Nation (Kenya), The Standard (Kenya), Daily News (Tanzania), The Guardian

(Tanzania), The East African (East Africa) and the popular Kiswahili

newspapers, all reflecting the negative effects of the rains in most parts of the

East African region. The media - especially the print media - has a major role to

play in sensitizing vulnerable communities, donor agencies and African

governments so as to help in pulling resources that will help to reduce the effects

of climate change in the African continent (Apolinary Tairo).

In Assam though the print media started in the pre independent period still the

role and impact is very much influential in the society. It enjoys a backdrop of the

strong history and contribution made during the critical period of pre-

independent and also early post- independent period. In today's world where

technology has touched the moon still the hardcopy version is very much popular

than the online version since. It has taken the space of morning teatime without

which day cannot.

Table no. 3: List of some regional newspapers in Assam

Sl.no

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

Assamese news papers

Asomiya Pratidin

Sad in

Dainik Janambhumi

Dainik Asom

Dainik Batori

Aamar Asom

Ajir Asom

Asomiya Khobor

Dainik Batori Kakot

English news papers

The Assam Tribune

The Telegraph

The Hindu

The Economic Times

Meghalaya Guardian

The States Man

The Indian Express

North -East Times

Times of India

Bengali newspapers

Dainik Jugasankha

Samoyik Prasanga

Hindi newspapers

Pratah Khobor

Dainik Purvoday

Sentinel (Hindi)

Purbanchal Prahari

79 I P a g e

Page 9: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

Dainik Janasadharan

Dainik Agradoot

Aji

Adinor Sambad

Adin

Niyamiya Barta

The Eastern Chronicle

The Hindustan Times

The Seven Sisters Post

Besides the hard copy version of the newspapers most of the papers are also

available in the online version which gives ample opportunity to the public to

have a look on these mirror of the state wherever they are, in fact lapse in daily

view can be continued through the online version .In the online version also

quality of the newspapers are very rich .But some papers are published from the

state only in the form of online version to fulfill some specific criteria of the

readers. Some of the e-newspaper from Assam are:

• Assam Times: This is a community newspaper published from

Assam. This paper mainly gives emphasis to Assam though this

paper deals with whole Northeastern area. This paper mainly has

concentrated on news from every nook and corner of the North

eastern states across the globe.News can be national, international

local news such as political, editorial, world affairs, business,

knowledge, Social, Entertainment, Political and educational etc.

This paper is also available to make this offline newspaper

readable.

Besides these newspapers, some important magazines and journals are also

published from Assam. These are online version or hardcopy for the children,

adults; housewives are different and provide information which is very relevant

in terms of quality and quantity. Some Science educational magazines are also

there to provide updated and latest information on science activities and events.

80 I P a g e

Page 10: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Table no. 4: List of some regional journal and Magazines of Assam

Magazines

Of literature

The Eclectic

Goriyokhi

Prantik

Natunpodatik

Damol

Bhumi

Ranghar

Swasthya

Satsori

Entertainmen

t journals

Trishul

Bismol

Maya

Romance

Rahashya

Trishnatur

Hiya

Women's

magazine

Nandini

PriyaXokhi

Popular

Science

magazine

Bigyan

Jeuti

Bigyan

Surabhi

Natun

Aviskar

Natun

Srijan

Teen

magazine

Jeevan

Children's

magazine

Sophura

Mouchaqu

e

Online

Bilingual

magazine

Enajori.co

Vivek

Jagruti

Bus

mag

Bus

Non

The press in modern times has become a powerful social institution

known as 'Fourth Estate'. It facilitates the exchange of thoughts and helps to

solve many complex processes on a large scale in the shortest time. The press

becomes an crucial weapon to stir the scruples of the people, to enlighten them

with new ideas. The press is also an tool to develop modem culture ushered in the

science and arts. Newspaper reading is a habit. The magnitude of print media has

not diminished with the advent of electronic media. The fact remains that the

print media still holds its own position which can never be threatened by the

onslaught of new media. In fact print media can benefit from the new technology.

If the print media is to survive the onslaught of the electronic media and retain its

glory as the thinking media, it has to look inward and do a serious introspection.

At no time in the history of the Indian press, the requirement for self evaluation

has been greater than now. Press Council of India in its publication 'Future of

81 I P a g e

Page 11: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Print Media' has given following recommendations for promoting and

strengthening the print

media.

Third Press Commission

Nearly two decades have gone since the Second Press Commission in

India had examined the status of the print media and submitted its report in 1982.

The UNESCO sponsored Mac Bride Commission's report (Many Voice one

World-Communication and Society, Today and Tomorrow) is also over two

decades old. The world has altered considerably in the interim period with the

emergence of a unipolar world, global market and fast development of the

Internet civilization and culture. Media is in a change both within and outside

India. The number and variety of newspapers has multiplied in the last two

decades. A revolution has also occurred in production and communications

technology. At the national level, it is time that a Third Press Commission is set

up to study and suggest ways and procedures to enable print media to fulfill its

functions in the new environment.

Internal Ombudsmen

To promote credibility and response to readers' reactions the institution of

Internal Ombudsmen may be strengthened or created complying with the need in

big newspapers. Newspapers with a minimum circulation (say 1 lakh per issue)

may be required to appoint independent Ombudsmen.

3. Cheaper newsprint for small papers

Genuine small newspapers may perhaps be helped with subsidized newsprint.

4. FIB Website

PIB Website already in operation may be strengthened and harnessed to

the maximum possible extent to provide readable language services, photo

services, feature service (including science service), cartoons, and comic strips

and so on.

5. Rural telephone exchanges

82 I P a g e

Page 12: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

More and more rural telephone exchanges should be provided for better news

gathering facilities for newspapers-big and small.

6. Convergence benefit

Many Websites are performing extremely well by combining audio-visual

and the print media, while the future of the media is considerably in the

convergence technology, a special media technology committee may examine if

the Indian print media can benefit from the convergence.

Co-operatives of small newspapers

Co-operatives of small newspapers in particular, may be encouraged to

run cost effective modern printing presses, internet connections and organize

workshops for journalists and printers for improving the overall quality of small

newspapers.

Insurance cover for journalists/editors

Journalists/editors should be provided adequate insurance cover by

owners and insurance companies through special schemes to protect them from

pressure, forced resignations, risk of life and so on.

Annual Accounts

Newspapers should be required by law to publish their annual accounts,

with full details of how much is spent on news operations and how much is

diverted for other purposes.

Social Audit of Press

Social audit of newspapers should be undertaken with regular periodicity to

evaluate and assess their performance vis a vis the society and its problems,

particularly of its weaker sections, and the development needs of the nation and

the inputs provided by the press to redress them.

Media Watch Groups

Media Watch Groups at regional/local levels should be encouraged to monitor the

contents of the newspapers at regular intervals, with a special eye on the

83 I P a g e

Page 13: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

suppression of important news, distortion and manipulation of the news, planting

of news, violations of journalistic ethics, etc.

Companies and Co-operatives of journalists

To ensure security of job and independence of journalists, the companies where

the journalists have a major shareholding as in some other countries and co­

operatives of journalists should be encouraged.

3.3 Media and Disaster Communication

Media can play a great role in communication of the natural disasters of the

region. Media has certain characteristics that make them powerful instrument of

disaster communication as they provide quick and easy access to large number of

people located at different places. It helps in highlighting the problems and

difficulties faced by the people affected by disasters. Media mobilizes public opinion

for relief and rehabilitation assistance. For the effective management of disasters the

most important point is to get access to the right information. All those organizations

who are concerned with managing disasters necessarily have the need to access

timely and accurate information. The manifestations of disaster, taking place in the

affected areas are informed by media only. Both the people and the governments

are alert by media. The issue of climate change is a very sensitive issue which has

different socio economic effects on the society and any wrong information may

lead to a great chaos therefore journalists must deal with sensitivity, intelligence

and accuracy. They require a healthy dose of skepticism and a strong stomach for

intrigues. In fact, the news analysts and commentators should have gain more

knowledge on these issues. Journalists should make it inheriting to report disaster

risk management without any failure and should gear up to focus on activities in

reporting to educate people and authorities for prevention, mitigation, adaptation

and rehabilitation due to disasters. In this competitive world, media is prioritizing

to sensationalize the news, but it is rather remarkable to sensitize the public about

understanding the disasters.

During Pre-Disaster

The possibility of occurrence of any disaster and the precautionary

measures can be announced by the media at the time of emergency. Just before

the disaster hits, emergency management officials hit the airwaves to broadcast

the message of impending danger and a specific action plan on how public can

84 I F a g e

Page 14: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

stay safe. Some great disasters as tsunami, fire and flood typically have warning 9

signs, allowing officials hours and possibly days to prepare beforehand. Officials

hold media conferences whenever they receive updated information about the

disaster. Those officials on the emergency management responsibility update the

public on the current situation and give specific directions on how the public can

prepare. During prime television special disaster preparedness news broadcasts

air viewing time in an effort to reach the masses. It is observed that news

coverage is interactive and allows the public to call the station and ask questions

on air. Producers often invite disaster management professionals to answer on-air

questions and present special information to help the public prepare for the

situation.

During Disaster

When a disaster strikes a horrifying situation occurs and goes in trauma.

If public are not given any prior warning or not informed about the safety

measures they should take in the time of their emergency then there will be no

chance of rescuing them. As at the time of disaster ,to give the media coverage is

very critical. For example, during tsunami which occurred in 2004, news media

provided 24-hour coverage on what people should do where to go and who to call

if they thought their family members or well known persons were victims. It was

seen that Media also provided updates on search and recovery efforts and tracked

the government's efforts to respond to the situation. During disaster, nearly every

household in affected areas lose power and television reception. In that time only

radio broadcasting helps to keep others informed about the storm's progress, track

and possible damage. Reporters often stand out in the middle of the storm to

report on the effects, which can help the viewing public assess the severity.

Amateur radio operators can use hundreds of frequencies and can quickly

establish networks tying disparate agencies together to enhance interoperability.

During Post-Disaster

This is the stage where media coverage is vital to keep the public informed of

potential safety hazards and business closings. It is the responsibility of the Schools

and office authorities to close these organizations immediately following a disaster.

Here the regional television news stations broadcast which facilities are closed, so

that residents can make alternate plans. News programs also cover which areas are

85 I P a g e

Page 15: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

destroyed or are dangerous. Emergency management officials will appear on TV to

hold updates concerning service restoration. Television media coverage may

continue as long as there is a threat to public safety.

In the city of Guwahati itself has regional channels but it is of utmost

important to check whether these channels are providing extensive environmental

information or not?What is the quality of such programmes and also the quantity

of the programmes on monthly basis.Both the television and radio channels are of

big concern for answering such queries. As North east is full of biodiversity as

well natural resources which is degrading day by day due to human intervention.

So to create public awareness regarding such issues what the regional media is

doing?But the regional print and electronic media are facing some problems

which must be shorted out to fulfill the actual goal. Some of these problems are

as follows:

In the media houses it is seen that both for the print or electronic media till now

no specific environmental journalist is employed which is the prime factor for

environmental information dissemination. The news and the related information

depends very much on individual's personality. If the person is environmental

lover then he obiously will give importance to each and every regional

environmental problems and will try to create the viewer's attention.

Unfortunately, these persons are neither trained nor have any idea on

environmental journalism and thus the coverage of environmental issues lies

completely on invidual's personal interests and commitment.

Another very important problem in using media for education is the lack of

feedback and control of the audience or readership so that it is difficult to assess

the impact of educational broadcasting. A support system that is needed for an

educational message to deliver it to its target group can be offered only in few

cases, the same is true for a deepening of information gained through the usage of

media, e.g. via sharing experiences through discussions. Interestingly, only

television and radio have an educational and motivational approach when dealing

with environmental issues, while newspaper editors feel that their job is limited to

providing their readership with information. Commercialization is another big

factor which keeps environmental issues silent. A definite obstacle for

environment playing an even more prominent role in media is commercialization.

86 I P a g e

Page 16: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Since many editors fee! that "you can get no money out of environment",

environment is not an agenda.

3.4 Role of Mass Media in identification and exploration of environmental

issues

Communication plays a central role in shaping of mind and understanding

of the natural world and the role of humans therein. In turn such understandings,

helps in realization of the situations and creates a corner for environment in the

heart of millions of people. In fact such understanding also helps in skill

development for required action for the protection of the earth. Communication

is also the terrain where diverse points of view are negotiated. The issues of

power and access to different arenas are important; some individuals or

organisations have a voice, while others are constrained. Communicating

specialist knowledge on complex environmental problems, such as climate

change, to policy-makers poses diverse challenges. It is important to device ways

to make scientific uncertainty and its implications for policy-making meaningful

to all.

The term 'environmental communication' is not a recent phenomenon

although it has been discussed all over the world in many dimensions and

context. It relates to the world civilization and religious perspectives. Particularly,

the Islam (Wikipedia, 2010) clearly discussed about the ways of life. It is called

the complete code of life (Mindamadai, 2010). Relevantly, other religions also

may deal with the environmental implications (Adherents, 2010). Its normal

meaning relates to surrounding's but obviously it is a concept that is relative to

whatever object it is which is surrounded. It is originated from the French word

"environ" which means encircle or make surroundings. In simple meaning

environment is an integral part of human life. It is also defined as the

surroundings of inhabitation and economic activities of the people. Broadly, it is

composed of three different components such as natural, techno sphere and social

environment. Everything is everything as pointed out Albert Einstein:

87 I P a g e

Page 17: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

"Environment is everything that isn't me". It means that everything that may

constitute environment (Simon Bail & Stuart, 1996). The nature is very delicate

and sensitive which should be handled with very care and our attitude must be

eco-friendly as since the starting of the earth we people have started interfering

with natural processes to fulfill our own needs. But before preparing for a simple

and considering attitude towards flora and fauna people must have gain enough

knowledge to relate to the global environmental procedure and meanings.

Therefore in order to support of the environmental consideration, we need to

critically discuss the role of the international intergovernmental environmental

actors, the international nongovernmental environmental institutions. In fact,

many initiatives on the environmental conservation and development have been

done by the international environmental organizations throughout the world.

From the very early ages since the starting of the religion in the world's history

the love towards the nature mention in the religious books like Bibel, Geeta and

Koran which are the tower of the three religions. What environment provides and

its importance must be recognized by the people then only environmental

degradation would be stopped and so environmental communication is of utmost

important. Environmental communication is both an activity/phenomenon and a

field of study that, not surprisingly, studies the activity/phenomenon. As an

activity/phenomenon, environmental communication is all of the diverse forms of

interpersonal, group, public, organizational, and mediated communication that

make up the social discussion/debate about environmental issues and problems,

and our relationship to non-human nature. This also can. be referred as the

broader social discussion about Nature. Environmental communication manifests

as the discourse of Nature and its subset, the environmental discourse. Starting

from billboards to Twitter, Facebook to Time magazine,Current TV to the

regional local public and hearing of scientific reports, environmental

communication is existing everywhere only its value is not realized.

Environmental communication is a part of nature. It consists of the relationship

between the nature and humans (Stephen W. Littlejohn & Karen A. Foss, 2010).

This also deals with the human nature relations and impacts. Simply, field of

communication discipline. This topic is concerned with the ways the people

communicate about the natural world and the impacts on the environment.

88 I P a g e

Page 18: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Environmental communication affected by several factors and context such as tiie

social, economical, political that influence to the formation. It is negotiated

within the cultural communication, mass media, public communication,

interpersonal communication, popular culture etc. Environmental communication

draws from the cultural theory, media theory, rhetorical theory, social movement

theory etc. History supports that it is originated from the early 1980s to 1984

based on theory and this theory states that the environmental communication

involves in the process and creation of this universe. This universe is involved

with the human creation. Additionally, in Cox's words (p.20), environmental

communication is "the pragmatic and constitutive vehicle for our understanding

of the environment as well as our relationships to the natural world; it is the

symbolic medium that we use in constructing environmental problems and

negotiating society's different responses to them." By pragmatic Cox means the

instrumental function of educating, alerting, persuading, mobilizing, solving, etc.

By constitutive he means the creative function of helping to shape our

perceptions of nature, environmental issues and ourselves.

According to V. K. Narayana Menon (1981) (cited by S.P. Alahari, 1997), the

notion of individuality is lost in the word 'mass' and various forms of media such

as radio, television, newspaper, etc., report events intended for such an enormous

number of listeners, viewers, and readers. Enormous advances in

telecommunication networks have revolutionized the function of mass media to

serve wider coverage at a faster pace worldwide. Thus it has provided an

enabling environment for media in the new era to achieve its ultimate aim of

reaching to a very large audience in Bhutan. In this context. Mass

communication, plays a crucial role in connecting the world to an individual, and

provides opportunity for the individual to communicate with a wider audience.

However, the downside of mass media communication, as national and

international media ownership is more likely to be influenced by a few, is in its

difficulty to maintain neutrality to what is being shared through different modes

of public communications (McDonald, 2004; Ura, 2006). A classic example of

the case in point can be illustrated by referring to often one-sided picture

presented by mainstream western media of events unfolding in Balkan in 1999

89 I P a g e

Page 19: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

and of the American war on Iraq (Kuensel, May, 1999a; BBC news, 2005). It is

reported by S.P. Alahari (1997), however, that one of the greatest concerns of

many communication scholars in not so much the effect of mass media on people

in general, but the potential function of mass media for bringing desirable social

change and for achieving the developmental goals of nations. Hundreds of

scholars set the stage on the dynamics of development and the role of mass media

in achieving developmental goals.

In practice environmental communication is done through different forms

of media which are basically Mass media. Institutional media, traditional media

and social media. The present chapter will discuss these above mentioned forms

of media practices for environmental communication with illustrations of some

case studies of special importance which will provide general idea and also the

current environmental awareness practices and its effectiveness.

3,5 Mass media practices

Media can focus on factors that cause environmental problems as well as

adverse impact on people. The environmental problems, which threaten the

present day existence as well as the future of humanity, are brought to peoples

notice by the media. Some of these 3 issues are really quiet alarming and need to

be focused upon, so that people can be made aware of their intensity. Straight

reports, discussions, photo features and articles by experts help in informing the

people about different aspects of climate change issue. The layman may not be

able to assess the impact of many of the environmental problems persisting

around them. The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term effect

on global warming, poses threat of melting ice caps in the polar region. The

inducing rise in sea level and extinction of all species of living beings on earth

cannot be comprehended in full measure by everybody. If media attempts to

educate the masses on such vital issues, at least, the intelligent and right-thinking

people will become aware about the need to take the precautionary measures and

they get sensitized towards the natural resource conservation and protection.

Mass-media campaigns are among the policy tools most commonly used

to attempt to influence public opinion of particular issues. The influence of the

90 I P a g e

Page 20: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

mass media on public opinion has been shown to be quite short-lived because

media coverage jumps from issue to issue, often from day to day (Driedger,

2007). Over the longer term, media attention of particular issues has been shown

to vary considerably, often in identifiable cycles (Downs, 1972). Nevertheless,

many public opinion surveys in developed countries have shown that television

and daily newspapers are used as primary sources of information (Project for

Excellence in Journalism, 2006). In Japan, Aoyagi-Usui (2008) revealed that

most of the Japanese public get its information about environment issues from

television and daily newspapers. The mass media are very influential tools for

widening public awareness of environmental issues (Schoenfeld et al., 1979;

Slovic, 2000).

In case of electronic media, Radio is found to be the cheap, most easily

accessible and the radio signals cover almost the whole country. It is found that

on average there are only 4.4 radio / transistors sets per 100 persons. 80 percent

are in urban homes, only about six million sets left with 525 million rural 10

population. Additionally, the frequency of listening to the radio is relatively low:

only 35% of the interviewees declared to listen to the radio regularly, most of

them ranking between half an hour and two hours per day. Since the use of radio

is not a significant one then obiously the role of radio in creating environmental

awareness can not be considered an important one due to the fact that there are

only very few regular environmental programs are broadcasted which hardly can

have effect on people's behaviour, although there is an instruction by Supreme

Court for all media that programs on environment should be broadcast. The point

to be concerned is that though India's Supreme Authority has ordered for such

beneficial programmes yet this has no serious effect on the radio channels or

radio programmes. Delhi FM is broadcasting two weekly programs on

environment motivated by the Ministry of Environment &Forests which are

"Kinare - Kinare" and "Ao Dilli Savaren". Different current environmental

problems like global warming, pollution problems, water scarcity problem,

climate chage etc. should be broadcasted and the on the basis of the different

target audiences the mode of presentation must be changed to fulfill the actual

goals unless there will be no use of these progrmmes. Unsystematic and

91 1 P a g e

Page 21: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

unorganized cannot help here by any means such programmes dealt are must

naturally adjusted to the target group and the background of the program: science

programs focus on scientific explanations and new technical developments,

children's programs have a more educational and motivational approach, city

programs are addressing local problems like air, water and noise pollution and so

on. The environmental programmes and news on the national level are very

scarce, if news on environment are broadcast this is most often at the regional

level.

As a whole it could be summarised radio is well below its potential in

creating environmental awareness and over the last few years no increase in

broadcasts on environment can be observed yet, there has been at least one

progressive approach in the use of radio in environmental education that should

be mentioned; In 1998, All India Radio, the Indian National Radio Network,

addressed environmental issues such as water, air and noise pollution,

deforestation, solid waste disposal, organic farming and other topics in a 52-

episode entertainment-education radio serial "Yeh Kahan Aa Gaye Hum"

("Where have we arrived?"), a story of rural background in which a factory

settles near a small village. The entertainment-education communication strategy

purposely designs and implements a media message to both entertain and

educate, in order to increase audience members' knowledge, create favorable

attitudes and change behavior. "Yeh Kahan Aa Gaye Hum" was produced under

the leadership of Mrs. Usha Bhasin with the assistance of the Central Pollution

Control Board of India. From June to December this via 31 radio stations this

serial was broadcast weekly with repeated versions covering seven Indian states

in the densely populated Hindi-speaking areas of northern India and could able to

attract the listenership upto lOOOOO.The main reason for such popularization was

the wide preprogram publicity via radio, television, press and NGOs working in

the broadcast area .The significant attraction of this serial was the serial itself

addressed environmental issues in an entertaining manner, trying to contact the

listeners in their every day life context, the epilogues usually delivered by a

credible media celebrity advertised the educational message. Obviously the

approach was an interactive one: A competitive spirit was fostered among

listeners by awarding prices for the quality of provided feedback, outstanding

92 1 P a g e

Page 22: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

community work by listeners in the realm of environmental conservation was

also recognized. The studies on the programme effectiveness accompanying the

broadcasting process showed that the radio serial provoked not only past-

broadcast discussion, but also the founding of clubs in which members listened to

the serial collectively and started campaigns to save the environment.

Thus this programme "Yeh Kahan Aa Gaye Hum was very successful and was

able to proved that the use of entertainment education as communication strategy

in the field of environment can be equally utilized as in social ones in which it

has been practiced before. In this new approach, especially via entertainment

radio it was possible to reach the less educated and rural parts of the population

which an extremely promising one so if one programme meet the challenges then

why not all the programmes? In India, electronic media are in a key position due

to the high level of illiteracy and they believe whatever the media broadcast

without any scientific base and any proper investigation. Studies have shown that

both radio and television are perceived as authoritative and friendly media by

vast percentages of the population. Since India's 45 million television sets cover

86.5 per cent of the country's population, television is one of the most powerful

effective means of propaganda and persuasion. In India over 10 million homes

have cable and satellite connections.

In remote villages Television has become a new status symbol. In very

rural areas people have at least sometimes access to television e.g. in small

restaurants and long route busses. But gradually the importance of television is

significantly increasing and this rapid growth rate of television sets (3 million

annually) will even increase numbers television in the future. The very

popularization of television is due to the fact that television provides both audio­

visual presentations which directly helps teaching practical work: A televised

presentation can be as clear as a face-to-face demonstration.

An extensive front-page coverage of acute environmental issues have

been provided by the television in the last years. Different environmental

programmes on acute environmental issues are broadcasted such as accidents

and spills while often relegating chronic environmental problems such as

shrinking rain forests and leaking underground storage tanks (and harder-to-cover

accidents) to the inside pages or the end of the news programs. Journalists and

93 I P a g e

Page 23: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

broadcasters look for timely news pegs on which to hang their stories. Accidents

and spills not only provide perfect news pegs but also dramatic visual images.

Nevertheless, issues of budget and geography sometimes affect television

networks, causing them to shy away from stories that are inconvenient for camera

crews to get to and cover (Greenberg et al., 1989).Considering these promising

prerequisites for the use of television in environmental education it is good news

that - compared to newspapers and radio - television does a good job in covering

environmental issues human are dominant of some characteristics-"Seeing is

believing". Discovery Channel, National Geographic Channel and Animal Planet

Channel are considered as the most sophisticated educational channels which

provides live telecast of different national international environmental

issues.They often make animation and demonstrate the whole process in very

clear and perfect way where viewers never remain any doubt. The life under

ocean, endangered and extinct species, high pollution effects, global warming

effects are presented in scientific way and clears all doubts of mind. All national

channels are regulated by law to offer environmental programs. Doordashan the

most important channel of dissemination that reaches all over the country has

three regular programs on environment: each of the weekly broadcasts of

scientifically profound "Earth Matters" focuses on one special environmental

problem. Targeted at educated people "Earth Matters" offers different

information on the sources, explains the consequences of the problem considered

and gives suggestions for solution by changing individual behavior. Again,

Weekly "Terraquiz", India's first environmental quiz show on television, is a

competition of the top ranking schools from Green Olympiad and is sent between

Hindu and English news. In the midnight "Nature Plus" was even broadcast

daily, most often however at midnight. The broadcasting of a forth weekly

programme of 30 minutes named "Earth" in form of a magazine that subsidizes

successful initiatives of individuals is planned by the Ministry of Environment &

Forest in cooperation with Doordashan. Additionally, BBC's "Earth Report"

offers exclusively information on environment and with the daily broadcast of

"The new adventures of Captain Planet" on Cartoon Network there is at least one

program on environmental issues especially designed for children. All these

94 I P a g e

Page 24: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

programmes have high impact on different target audiences and fulfill the actual

goal of the programme.

Different case studies are found where both the print media and electronic

media are focusing different global environmental problems such as climate

change, global warming and also helping in disaster mitigation .Climate change is

a serious global issue of concern about which most of the rural people are

unaware where media is working as the mediator in different parts of the world

for solving such disasters.

3.6 Other media types and environmental information dissemination

3.6.1 Institutional media

With the growing technologies educational institutions have started use of

multimedia technologies for teaching different subjects in the schools or in the

secondary and tertiary levels of education either in government and private

institutes or regular and distance mode institutes . In both formal and non-formal

mode of education Environmental education has been practiced as compulsory

course in Indian primary schools to Universities. Understanding the current

global environmental hazards the honourable Supreme Court of India has

introduced the Environmental education (EE) program as a regular course in

India and thus following these directives several environmental programmes were

implemented in the country from the primary level to tertiary level of education.

In India, taking initiative from Stockholm summit 1972, it incorporated

environmental concern in the constitution through 42"'' Amendment in 1976.Thus

gradually environment has become a priority in policy statements. Planes and

Strategies especially after 1980 with the establishment of a full fledged Ministry'

of Environment and forests (C.J.Sonowal, 2009). The same way, increasing

concern on Environmental Education (EE) in India gained its momentum while

its importance was recognized by the Government and policy was planned

subsequently to introduce EE in schools. The government of India in 1896,

declared the importance of teaching environmental education in schools

throughout the country and thus an increased awareness of unsustainable

practices throughout the country was made, particularly in agriculture. Realizing

95 I P a g e

Page 25: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

that villagers were unable to produce enough food to meet their yearly need due

to increased population growth coupled with a decrease in the land's carrying

capacity, education and government officials introduced environmental education

themes into the national curriculum (Pande, A., 2001). The National Policy on

Education, 1986 states "There is a paramount need to create a consciousness of

the Environment. Certainly it must permeate all ages and all sections of society,

beginning with the child. Teching of Environmental programe must create

environmental consciousness among students in schools and colleges. The

National Policy on Education visualizes a national curricular framework, which

contains a common core including several elements having direct bearing on the

natural and social environment of the pupils. The government hoped to use

environmental education programmes in schools and communities as a conduit to

increase awareness about the environment, and give citizens the knowledge and

skills to respond to environmental issues (Pande, L., 2002). Thus Environmental

studies were used as an interdisciplinary subject in the initial years of schooling.

At later levels it narrowed down to the conventional disciplines (Kumar, A.,

1986). From UGC (India) organized national seminars on Environmental

Education through Universities in 1984 it was seen that though the people knew

about the importance of the Environment education only few were clear or had

any idea or experience as to how environment education could be successfully

taught (Khoshoo, T.N. :199]). Environmental education in one or the other form

was existed in school curriculum prior to the Honourable Supreme Court of

India's directive on 18th December, 2003, to impart EE in educational institutes

as a compulsory subject. But controversies were there in way of imparting EE in

school as the curriculum was not similar throughout the country and there was no

uniform standard too. Several discussions were held and suggestions were

forwarded by different authorities, but no general consensus could be derived at

the end. Except for the schools in Uttarakhand where EE was included as one of

the regular subjects up to class VlII, no other schools in the country had found a

suitable place for regular EE course (C.J. Sonowal, 2009).

Most of the early research studies show that print media are the prime

source of information dissemination in the conventional and traditional

institutions while the application of multimedia is observed in the distance mode

96 I P a g e

Page 26: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

of education for the environmental education practice. Various multimedia

approaches basically -include web technologies, modules, audio video

programmes and online teaching methodologies. The increasing gap between the

learners and the facilitators is the main reason for use of such technologies which

acts as online instructors. Thus these multimedia approaches provide the learners

a plateform for communicating with the teacher instructor and can clear their

doubt in teacher's abscentia. Here the investigator would like to highlight some

of the case studies of multimedia use for environmental teaching in national and

international context.

The study conduted by Kudrajavtsev and Usova (2006) investigated how

online communication among youth teams form two countries contributed to

achievement of environment education .They found from the study that he

computer mediated international exchanges when combined with local hands on

investigation and other activities , may contribute to youth understanding of their

own and foreign social and ecological communities. It also revealed that

education programmes connected youth from across the globe via the internet to

help them explore and share knowledge about, science, environment, health and

other issues . Additionally, these programmes involve young minds and Global

virtual school for Sustainable Development. Some of these goals teach youth

about science, develops their computer skills and engage them in cross cultural

collaborations and local actions.

Dot-Comments, (2007) has stated about the youth communicating and

networking project 'Youth can Med'which introduces sustainable development in

the Lebanese schools and also provide opportunities to the young learners who

can make an impact in their own communities. The project also had organized

one conference where video conference technology was used involving countries

like New york, Morocco and India.

Nomura, K., 2004 World school Network "Ecoplus" considers recent

advances in information and communication technology and their potential for

environmental education particularly for school children. It provides a platform to

school children via the internet where they can exchange their views and gain

environment related information from all over the world.

97 I P a g e

Page 27: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

The Green Schools programme was launched by Centre for Science and

Environment in India where environmental auditing was carried out with the help

of Surveys. In response, CEE initiated the "Green Teacher" as one year distance

mode 'Diploma in Environmental Education' in partnership with the COL. This

course was designed for providing a continuing learning opportunity in

Environmnetal programme for the teachers and tried to train teachers to

effectively take up environmental concerns and issues in the classroom, and

engage their students in practical, action-oriented Environmental Education (EE)

activities and projects. In this program the teacher is a facilitator and organized

activities on the basis of a handbook called Green school programme manual.

Significantly, a Green educators Network has been launched which has the vision

of bringing together environment educators across the globe to create a plat form

to share and discus various aspects of Environmental Education. The initiative

also releases "Down to Earth" a weekly dispatch of feature articles in English and

Hindi languages.

The study of Guadagno, Dhital & Petley( 2003) stated the "land-man" the

Asia-European project, a new dimension aiming to implement both a new

curriculum and a new distance learning model in the field of landslides

management which deals with situations that occur prior to, during, and after the

landslide. The emphasis in Land-Man is placed on establishing methodologies,

guidelines, and tools to develop Open and Distance Learning (ODL) for the

future improvement and harmonization of education in Landslides Management.

The project has the main intension to use internet-based tools in order to

strengthen the co-operation between partners and thus lay a stable, cross-cultural,

internet-oriented foundation for the future ODL-based educational model and

implemnetd all those required activities. The project also aims to nurture positive

attitudes towards distance learning by changing the techniques whereby students

learn landslides management, using the latest educational strategies and

technology. Through an established web site (www.land-man.net) the project

aims to create a self-sustaining virtual community open to academics,

professionals and decision makers, thus reaching and benefiting a wide

multidisciplinary user group. Firstly, academics attending the curricula and the

training courses will be in a position to pass on the knowledge and experience

98 I P a g e

Page 28: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

gained to their students. The training course is specifically designed for this

purpose and part of the output for the activity will be documentation that can be

used by participants for future teaching purposes.

Ontario schools have environmental education programme which

addresses how the schools are run and what contents the students learn? The main

focus of the Ontario school is in student success in both academics and positive

contribution to society. The programme aims to influence young people during

the formative period of their lives, and affect an exponential impact as children

take a culture of conservation home with item. Ontario schools EE programme is

designed collaboratively by school boards to incorporate EE as environmentally

responsible action into the school setting .

Sally Crompton & Robin Roy (2001) have introduced a new distance

learning course 'working with our Environment: Technology for a Sustainable

Future'. This team was an interdisciplinary team within the Technology Faculty

of the Open University developed this undergraduate course, which enrolls over

1500 students per year. The main objectives and aims of the programmes is to

help students understand how the use of technology to meet human material

needs contributes to environmental effects. At the start of the course a lifestyle

environmental assessment activity, called EcoCal, is integrated within students'

study materials which enables students to assess the main impacts on the

environment arising from their own household's consumption of energy,

transport, food and water and production of waste. Through the use, either of a

printed questionnaire or publicly available software, students can calculate their

'Ecological Footprint' and then consider and model the effects of changes to their

lifestyle. The aim of these suggestions is to encourage students to think of ways

of reducing the environmental impact of their own household, perhaps discussing

with others in the household and thinking creatively. Students are asked to write a

report of about 1500 words outlining the changes that they considered reducing

their household's environmental impacts as a result of carrying out the EcoCal

Activity. From a statistical analysis of the data (Roy and Caird, 2000) the

contributions to the total household Ecological Footprint for the whole Open

University student sample are in order of magnitude (taking averages per person)

99 I P a g e

Page 29: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

from Transport, Energy, House & garden, Shopping, Waste and Water. On

average Transport and Energy account for nearly three quarters of the total

Ecological Footprint per person.

A number of reports have been published in recent years examining the

relationship among ICTs, the environment and climate change at national and

regional levels. So far, however, relatively little attention has been paid in

international governance institutions to the role ICT-based innovation could play

in meeting the challenge of climate change or responding to other environmental

issues. For example, the 2007 United Nations Global Environment Outlook

"GEO-4: Environment and Development"; the 2007/08 United Nations Human

Development Report "Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity in a Divided

World"; the OECD's 2007 Innovation and Growth strategy; and the 2008 OECD

Environmental Outlook to 2030 all make only slight, passing reference to the role

ICTs can play in relation to climate change and other environmental issues.

"Sustainable development and environmental awareness concept" studied

by Pass (2003) mentioned about the environment specific website ENO-

Environment Online a global virtual school with network based in Finland. This

also included 400 numbers of participating schools. Four environmental themes

are studied within a school year on a weekly basis. The communication platform

of that school is based on Google's free suite of communication tools, including

Google's groups, maps, docs, e-mail and its "Talk" chat application. ENO's

learning activities include a youth forum for discussing issues of sustainable

development and environmental awareness. It uses a global tree planting

campaign among schools as a unifying motivator; and applies a school "

twinning" model where schools from different countries partner up to learn about

specific themes or work on projects together.

Asia-Pacific Environmental Innovation Strategies (APEIS) & Research on

Innovative and Strategic Policy Options (RISPO) which conducted study over

utilization of ICT in delivery of environmental education in school level. World

School Network (WSN) had some objectives to develop an attitude and interest

among the students towards contributing to global society, to provide

opportunities to children to learn via global communications that environmental

issues throughout the world are interrelated, to help children take initiative on

100 I P a g e

Page 30: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

environmental issues in their own communities and also to develop an

international educational programme for current environmental issues. Various

communication platform provided by WSN for those students were "Project

circles" and "Adventure project" which included some of the specific ICT based

activities.

The IT/ICT based project involves not only the aspect of environmental

education but also that of inter-cultural communication, English language,

development studies, and international education, etc. A simple illustration is it is

reported that many school children in Japan learnt about life without electricity

through communication with Micronesian children, which enhanced their

knowledge about differences in lifestyles and deepened their understanding about

their affluent and convenient way of life as well as its environmental impacts

(World School 1995). The IT tool can develop the children's capacity of

exploring, which increases the inputs in their knowledge. Also, "having

somebody to talk to about what they have studied" motivates children to learn

(World School Japan 1995). The behavioral change was also noticed through

learning. For example, children of one school have made a volunteer circle called

"World Chance Children" to issue newspapers, which are disseminated to the

community to raise environmental awareness, and to collect the scattered cans

and bins for recycling (World School Japan 1997).

Some secondary impact was also noticed among the children which can have a

positive impact on adults and the community Their achievements include policy

making for recycling, waste reduction and segregated disposal (with local

government), passing out reusable shopping bags to the use of disposable bags

(with Lions Clubs), cleanup projects in their hometowns (with other schools); and

composting and opening of a flea market (World School Network 2002). Based

on the WSN activities the lessons that could be learnt are IT/ ICT technology to

promote environmental education at schools. The various activities of the World

School Network have enhanced the learning process by providing different

views, facilitating discussion, etc. Such learning not only increases the

knowledge and learning motivation of children, but also changes their attitudes

and behaviour, which can have a positive impact on the community at large.

101 I P a g e

Page 31: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

3.6.2 Traditional media and Assam

Tradition can be simply defined as tiie cumulative heritage of society which

permeates through all levels of social organization, social structure and the

structure of personality. Tradition is found in the form of habit, custom, attitude

and the way of life is transmitted from generation to generation either through

written words or words of mouth. There is no doubt that the traditional media like

direct interaction and communication of an individual with his family, friends,

neighbours or environmental activists can play an important role in enhancing

environmental awareness, another perspective would stress that the frequency of

discussions on environment or, in more general terms, the use of traditional

media is more an indicator of the prevailing level of environmental awareness

than a factor contributing to it. Tradition always plays an important role in

creating artistic process, particularly in the field of folk performing arts. Tradition

is the process of transmission of the age old values and the contextual

manifestation and interpretation of the universe. The traditional performing arts

indicate belongingness and affinity in cultural context and are considered as an

integral part of general life of people in traditional societies.

In the year 1972, when the international parenthood federation and UNESCO

organized a series of meetings in London relating to integrated use of folk and

traditional media in family planning communication programmes the first

significant international recognition of the traditional media.The traditional media

became effective in many political and social campaigns launched by Mahatma

Gandhi. Likewise, the eminent Tamil poet Sumbramanium Bharati started using

folk music to evoke patriotic feelings. Folk tunes were used to popularize songs

and glories of spinning wheels and consequently boycotting British goods.

Similarly, in 1940's India People Theatre Association successfully handled some

of the popular regional theatre like "Jatra" of Bengal, "Bavai" of Gujarat,

''Tamsa" of Maharastra, "Burkatha" of Andhra Pradesh, to increa

The outcome of various researchers has established the importance of folk media

in development communication. Kamlongera and Van Den Stichele (2000)

viewed that dialogue is the essence of any work in communication for

development.Folk media has quickly been recognizedas one way of ensuring

102 I P 3 g e

Page 32: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

such a dialogue. Zwaal (2000) said that folk media is a communication vehicle

for promoting and improving dialogue which the common people or rural farmers

employ to deliver their messages. Panford etal. (2001), Assam's rich folk-theatre

traditions are on the verge of extinction and the artists are living in acute poverty

as the government has taken no initiative in this regard, the premier literary

organization "Asom Sahitya Sabha" alleged today. Kamrupiya Bhuliya, Ojapali,

Khulia Bhaoria, Bharigaan, Kushangaan, Putala Naach and other forms of

traditional folk theatre face threat of the mass media. The investigator here would

like to describe some of the important traditional shows which obiously can meet

the urgent need of media and also can help enough in environmental knowledge

dissemination.

Jatras

These are very popular folk theatre spread throughout the areas of Indian

sub-continents including Bangladesh. In the Indian states of West Bengal, Bihar,

Assam, Orissa and Tripura, Jatras are usually four hour long plays preceded by

amusical concert, often lasting nearly an hour used to attract audience. The

dramatic performance itself is liberally mixed with dramatic monologues, songs

and duet dances, routines on the folk tune which are often seen as scene

transitions. Jatra plays are usually performed on the stages that are open on all

sides. The Jatra movement gradually moved to the urban areas and even brought

literaryworks to the rural masses which were predominantly illiterate at that time.

There is a huge scope in the state to deliver the environmental messages to the

illiterate people in the rural areas.

Songs

Assam is the source of huge biodiversity including forest and animal resources

which are highlighted in traditional "Bongeef , these are the folk songs of Assam

and relates mainly the natural environmental resources like forest resources,

animal resources of the state. These songs indirectly mean for preserving these

natural resources which are very much precious and deliver messages of

environmental management. But due to the introductions of various modem

songs these songs are going to death .Therefore it is an urgent need for

preservation and reintroduction of these traditional songs which helps delivering

environmental messages to the mass."Bihugeet" also sometime proved to be the

103 I P a g e

Page 33: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

messenger of seasons and beautiful environment of Assam though it is famous as

traditional romantic songs .Various beautiful natural resources of Assam like

Orchid, vulnerable plants are also described along with the romantic messages

which also can serve as the best tool for developing environmental concern.

Bator Naat

Batomaat are basically the street plays organized for awareness

campaigning against different socio environmental issues where the actor tries to

act and delivers the massages to the public.Under the GoI-UNDP Disaster Risk

Management (DRM) Program, "BaatorNaat" (street plays) were organised to

generate awareness on disaster preparedness. These were done during various

community festivals social events like the buffalo fighting, "Jon Bill" Mela,

BungiMela, cock fighting and various religious gatherings. The community

participated very enthusiastically and proactively in programme, which increased

the community's level of preparedness. "Ankia Bhaona" was traditionally

confined to satras with performances strictly confined to those associated with

these monasteries where the stories of Ramayana and Mahabharata were depicted

using acts and drama on the stages in some occasions. These also have huge

scope in delivering environmental messages to the public.

3.7 ICT and Environment

Ham /Amateur Radio

Amateur radio is often used as a means of emergency communication in the

emergency times of crisis and natural disasters, when wire line, mobile phones and

other conventional means of communications fail. Amateur radio is not as dependent

on terrestrial facilities as it is dispersed throughout a community without "choke

points" such as cellular telephone sites that can be overloaded. Amateur radio

operators are experienced in improvising antennas and power sources and most

equipment today can be powered by an automobile battery. Annual "Field Days" are

held in many countries to practice these emergency improvisational skills. The

operators use hundreds of frequencies and quickly establish networks tying disparate

agencies together to enhance interoperability.

Mobile Technology

104 I P a g e

Page 34: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Mobile phones can play a very crucial role in the time of hazards and natural

disasters. Mobile phones are the multimodal tool par excellence. In disaster

management, SMS can be used to organize mass mobilizations, action alerts,

precautionary and relief measures advocated by Government and Non-Governmental

organizations. Uncountable developments have occurred in the functions and the use

of mobile phones include the enhanced ability of phones to create and transmit

content other than SMS. High quality photo and video capability in the newest

generation 14 of mobile phones has led to several software tools that allow people to

publish photos, audio, and videos from mobilizations directly to disaster related

websites. Bulk SMS are also being sent through mobiles.

Web Based Technologies

Internet has made the world a very small place. Basically different Web

Based Technologies are emerging as a very important tool for effective planning,

communication, and training in the various stages of the disaster management. These

technologies provide a platform for people across the world to exchange ideas,

knowledge and technology. It brings people together with common interests

irrespective of geographical location. In the time of disaster management these

technologies reaches out to every nook and corner of the world and more and more

people become online. All the countries recognized the importance of developing an

information infrastructure capable of sustaining state of art technology for use at the

time of disasters. Additionally, there is a move towards globalization of disaster

networks to provide speedy assistance to every disaster victim, irrespective of the

national boundary and geographical location. Now a days technologies are

becoming more user-friendly, and cost-effective in India, Internet GIS is used for the

management of disasters. These are very much effective in the event of any disaster

for providing the first hand information about the extent of damage, the areas

affected and to direct the rescue and relief operations. In India, the SWOT analysis

(strengths, limitations, opportunities and the risks) is the Internet-based GIS for

disaster management. Maps and spatial information are important components of the

overall information in case of disaster event (flood, earthquake, cyclone, landslide,

wildfire and famine). Hence mapping and spatial information acquisition becomes

vital for disaster management effort.

3.8 Newly emerging social media and Environmental knowledge

dissemination

105 I P a g e

Page 35: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

Today's world is spending 10% of the total iiours of the daily schedules in

using social media. Generally, "Social media" refers to web-based and mobile

technologies that people use to share information and ideas online (EPA). These

technologies help people in creating and sharing content in innovative and

interesting ways. Social media also provides many exciting possibilities for

government agencies to communicate and collaborate with the public. Social

media allows people to share new ways to use information which offer new

insights or ways to solve problems. There is no doubt that social media is one of

the biggest phenomena the world has seen in decades, with over 500 million

facebook users, and countless more on twitter, youtube and the blogosphere. This

emerging media is clearly connecting people and organizations from different

parts of the world within the same platform. People are more habituated to these

technologies than traditional newspapers, T.V. channels and radio as social media

provides uncountable valuable information related to different issues occurring in

different comers of the globe. A recent study claims that 73% of 12-17 year olds

are on social networking sites (Lenhart, Purcell, Smith, Zickuhr 2010). There is

no doubt that there is a growing population of young adults that are ardent users

of social media platforms. Today, with Facebook or Twitter, youths today are

very much connected with each other and other global/local issues through the

internet. Gradually these are becoming the prior interest of the young generation

for fashion, music, events or entertainment; social media platforms are fast

replacing traditional communication channels such as televisions and radios. This

cant be said that this technology is popular only among the youths only but social

media platforms are also utilized by industry and government agencies as a

preferred tool of communication with the general public. These technologies

provide a big platform for network and have the potential to bridge diverse

opinions and perspectives, and ultimately bring in students that may have

traditionally felt alienated by past environmental efforts. Many researches

suggest that the future of activism and civic engagement is found online.

Education needs to reform with the changing social technologies, to best equip

students with the tools for proper digital literacy. Environmental education can

also be a part of this change, and grow from the affordances provided by digital

platforms. Thus the new media definitely presents a refreshing and flexible look

106 I P a g e

Page 36: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

at environmental issues which environmental education can benefit from which

can help provide insight into how to reach a wider audience with information that

concerns a global audience. Even if many students do not identify as

environmentalists, the issues range across disciplines and ultimately impact

diverse populations. A wider range of voices become a part of this global

conversation can help balance and develop current understandings of major

environmental issues. There is obviously a social component to environmental

issues, and these electronic networks can help create a more holistic

understanding. Today Hundreds of environmental blogs, forums are serving as

the very effective platform for millions of environmentalists, researchers,

students and people related to environment for sharing their information to each

other. Huge population of youths is making waves in the country with their

intense engagement with social media platforms. As one of the nation's major

assets or resource, the energy (time, interest and passion) in using social media

tools should be harness to evoke a positive impact for the country in general, and

in achieving sustainable development.! n Malaysia alone, there is an estimated

1.5 million Facebook users, making Malaysia ranked #19 in the world in terms of

highest number of FB users but the question of concern is that if these blogs and

forums helps by any means for environmental knowledge sharing or not or if yes

then how? In a study conducted by the Synovate Young Asians in 2009, their

results found that over 45% of Malaysian youth use the internet over other media

regularly. Synovate's latest annual Young Asians survey also found that 40% of

Malaysian youth used the Internet to keep them up-to-date while 43% said the

Internet gave them useful information.

Here the investigator would like to discuss specifically about

environmental related social networking sites not about twitter or facebook. For

the nature lovers Environmental blogs and forums are the typical social

networking sites. These sites provide the opportunity to share their valuable

thoughts and information in national and international level. Discussions on

environmental problems (regional, national and global) are common in these

forums and sometimes solutions measures are also added which help the society a

lot in finding new direction .Such forums can be categorized depending upon the

107 I P a g e

Page 37: CHAPTER-III PRINT MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENT These …shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/93285/8/08_chapter 3.pdf · The effect of the depletion of ozone layer and its long term

users. As some of the blogs and forums are completely for environmental

scientists and researchers where only they can subscribe for knowledge

dissemination. Such forums also provide high quality research publications

published in national and international journals .The research publications

uploaded in these sites addresses regional and global environmental issues, status

and also some mitigation measures. Furthermore, those people related to

teaching and curricular development process of environmental subject can be

benefited highly through such related publications. Thus these forums help them

providing enough opportunity to know the reasons what is and why these

problems are rising day by day around the world. Another facility of asking

questions regarding different environmental issues seeking the appropriate

answer to solve their queries are available in such blogs. Thus these sites provide

ample scope for environmental knowledge delivery related to local and global

environmental problems.

The researcher here feels to use such blogs for the betterment of the

society instead of using facebook and twitter for announcing personal updating.

Different foreign environmental organizations are using such social blogs and

forums for knowledge delivery process which should be adopted in our country

also where regional environmental problems could be addressed. Social media

platforms have features such as timelines and the capacity to document (pictorial

representation) past, present and future environmental efforts, which helps the

user (social media user) to plan and arrange for engagements with a particular

environmental effort or cause. People should take opportunity in these great

learning platforms especially if there is growing interest among youths to start

their initiatives on the ground. Thus social media platforms become a good

reference or source of environmental advocacy efforts, globally and locally.

Some university lecturers are also resorting to using social media platforms to

garner more active participating from their students in a particular subject matter;

and Social media environmentalism is a new buzzword but one which is

spreading like wild fire on social media platforms. For environmental discussion.

Youths can readily set up a site or account which acts as an informal channel or

group that can help advance a particular cause or effort on the ground.

108 I P a g e