2022
DOI: 10.1080/17524032.2022.2144403
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Framing Geothermal Energy in Indonesia: A Media Analysis in A Country with Huge Potential

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Our findings indicate that media frames offer insights into the ways in which dominant state and non‐state discourses around youth in agriculture are constructed and reproduced through media and neoliberal discourses that promote youth's role in intensifying agricultural practices. Corroborating observations of other studies (Trisiah et al ., 2022), we found that dominant framings by state and private sector actors are given greater coverage, and thus likely have a greater impact than those of community actors, such as grassroots organisations and farmers groups as well as young people themselves, on how farming‐related demographic problems are defined in political discourse and the kinds of solutions proposed. The disjuncture between the problem framing and ‘rural youth entrepreneurship’ solutions proposed by state and non‐state actors and the realities of structural constraints to entry into agriculture youth face is not unique to Indonesia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…Our findings indicate that media frames offer insights into the ways in which dominant state and non‐state discourses around youth in agriculture are constructed and reproduced through media and neoliberal discourses that promote youth's role in intensifying agricultural practices. Corroborating observations of other studies (Trisiah et al ., 2022), we found that dominant framings by state and private sector actors are given greater coverage, and thus likely have a greater impact than those of community actors, such as grassroots organisations and farmers groups as well as young people themselves, on how farming‐related demographic problems are defined in political discourse and the kinds of solutions proposed. The disjuncture between the problem framing and ‘rural youth entrepreneurship’ solutions proposed by state and non‐state actors and the realities of structural constraints to entry into agriculture youth face is not unique to Indonesia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In Indonesia, as elsewhere (Carvalho and Burgess, 2005; Boykoff, 2008), the media frames information in ways that reflect dominant policy and corporate assumptions, motives and agendas (Ekayani et al ., 2016). Often government and industry actors have more influence over the media framing of policy issues, while the concerns of local communities receive less media attention (Trisiah et al ., 2022). 2 State, corporate and development actors as well as media establishments often work in tandem to generate sustained discourse and representations that influence and legitimise particular policy and corporate agendas (Kingdon, 2003; Baumgartner and Jones, 2010; Knill and Tosun, 2020).…”
Section: A Media Framing Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the future, one should measure college students’ environmental concerns and expectations in advance for comparison. If the correlation of proenvironmental attitudes in different social systems such as economy, law, science, mass media, education, art, and religion is analyzed in detail (Trisiah et al, 2022), these complex dependencies determine the correlation of environmental communication and public participation as social changes (Kumpu, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(4) The choice of models and methods may affect the results differently (Trisiah et al, 2022). The research field of the relationship between the LKM model and the proenvironmenal scale is still relatively open, and its accuracy and reliability are worth evaluating.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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