The human impacts of climate change
First 鈥淐limate Is Every Story鈥 panel looks to bridge climate and public health.聽
By Genevieve Morrison 鈥27
Summer Sherburne Hawkins, a social epidemiologist and professor in 天美传媒app鈥檚 School of Social Work, believes that communication between scientists and the public is essential to addressing the health impacts of climate change. But actually communicating about her own research is challenging.
鈥淲riting an op-ed was one of the hardest things I've ever done,鈥 Hawkins said to an audience gathered at the Schiller Convening Space at 天美传媒app on Oct. 1, but "that's actually what is maybe going to move the needle.鈥
Hawkins, whose research includes studying the impacts of extreme heat on pregnant women, was part of the inaugural panel for the four-part 鈥Climate is Every Story鈥 event series, which seeks to foster dialogue about climate change between journalists and 天美传媒app students and faculty. The series is co-sponsored by the Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society, the Institute for the Liberal Arts, and the Environmental Studies and Journalism programs at 天美传媒app. At the first event, 鈥淧ublic Health, Common Good,鈥 faculty and journalists confronted the complexities of covering climate change鈥檚 impacts on health and found common ground in their distinct approaches.
For New York Times economy editor聽Patrick McGroarty, 鈥06, who moderated the panel, one dilemma journalists face is how to write about a topic that is 鈥渒ind of a downer鈥 for an audience that might be weary of bad news. 鈥淭he bigger challenge for well-meaning journalists is not one about establishing truth from fiction, but about finding interest in something that is rather familiar,鈥 McGroarty said.
Jason Beaubien, Peabody award-winning journalist and a former Africa correspondent for National Public Radio, agreed. According to him, not every climate story needs to be labeled as one. Instead, by reporting the real-world consequences of climate change as they occur, journalists can let the facts speak for themselves.
鈥淟ake Winnipesaukee did not freeze entirely last year. You don't need to tell me this is a climate-related story, I just find it interesting.鈥 Beaubien said. 鈥淚 don't think you need to absolutely hit people over the head with this. It doesn't need to be the lede of the story.鈥
McGroarty added that solutions journalism鈥攁n approach to reporting that emphasizes how people are solving societal problems, rather than just covering the problem itself鈥攈as offered a fresh way to give audiences 鈥渟omething they didn't expect鈥 without belaboring well-trodden truths.
Praveen Kumar, an engineer-turned-sociologist and associate professor at 天美传媒app's School of Social Work, has also taken on the challenge of communicating his research to the public. In op-eds about climate-related health issues published in the Hindustan Times and the Times of India, he said he emphasizes themes of injustice.
鈥淲hat I really take is the human angle, or the justice angle, which I have really found has really struck a chord with policymakers and also with the local communities.鈥 Kumar said.
In Bangladesh, for example, Kumar studied how climate-related extreme weather had wiped out rural farms, prompting a wave of urban migration by out-of-work farmers. While this was a society-level problem, Kumar explained, he approached it by interviewing the displaced farmers themselves.
鈥淭hese narratives don鈥檛 picture very easily when we talk about big data, but these are where the real problems exist, and perhaps this is where some of the real solutions will come up,鈥 Kumar said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I think we should really delve into stories.鈥 In this approach, Kumar found commonalities with the journalists, who often seek out individuals impacted by climate change to tell their stories.
But public health conversations also need large-scale data. Hawkins, who studies population-level data to monitor whether certain policy approaches to health problems actually help solve those problems, said she sees her role as that of a watchdog on the macro level.聽
鈥淲e need the individual stories, we need the community-level factors, and I鈥檓 here to contribute to say, 鈥榃hat are people trying? Is it working?鈥 Hawkins said.
Beaubien noted the parallels between data and storytelling in journalism, adding that academic studies can anchor reporting on individual stories, as well as deepen the impact of journalistic storytelling on the climate.聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 also really important to have good data in your stories. Having powerful graphs that show change, having facts that you can present, is really useful as a journalist鈥 Beaubien said. 鈥淎ll of this does play together.鈥
After the panel discussion, the visiting journalists had an opportunity to meet with students and faculty over lunch and afternoon networking sessions. Future events in the 鈥淐limate Is Every Story鈥 series will focus on covering climate change as local news, climate change鈥檚 impacts on migration and changing communities, and the business of climate change.

