Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Greenlash in the media

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Greenlash in the media

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Greenlash in the media. / Tao, Yingnian; Ryan, Mark.
In: Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Vol. 12, 970, 01.07.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Tao, Y & Ryan, M 2025, 'Greenlash in the media', Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, vol. 12, 970. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7

APA

Tao, Y., & Ryan, M. (2025). Greenlash in the media. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 12, Article 970. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7

Vancouver

Tao Y, Ryan M. Greenlash in the media. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. 2025 Jul 1;12:970. doi: 10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7

Author

Tao, Yingnian ; Ryan, Mark. / Greenlash in the media. In: Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. 2025 ; Vol. 12.

Bibtex

@article{76398010bcd248c395fcf022af673b4c,
title = "Greenlash in the media",
abstract = "This study uses metadata visualisation and corpus linguistics to examine patterns of representation of the emerging term greenlash in media reports, as retrieved from the Nexis news database. The metadata analysis reveals that media coverage of greenlash has surged since 2021, predominantly in left leaning European and North American media sources. Through Sketch Engine, collocation analysis identified core thematic areas surrounding greenlash: definition and resistance, status, actor, cause and impact, and location. Our findings indicate that greenlash is primarily a European phenomenon, which may be attributed to a lack of mainstream outlets through which actors can voice opposition to climate policies. The phenomenon is largely driven by economic concerns, in response to specific policies perceived to impose financial burdens on protesting groups. Moreover, our analysis reveals that media organisations often introduce the term greenlash as broad, generalised public opposition to environmental policies rather than a complex, economically driven opposition to specific policies, and portray this opposition in a negative light. We suggest that media organisations may downplay these elements in opposition to neoliberal or populist ideologies or to retain readership. This phenomenon thus highlights the complex intersection between environmental policies, economic burdens, and political divisions underscoring the broader tensions and paradoxes surrounding climate action and socio-economic disparities.",
keywords = "greenlash, resistance, environmental policies, media communication, neoliberalism, collocation analysis, corpus linguistics",
author = "Yingnian Tao and Mark Ryan",
year = "2025",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Humanities and Social Sciences Communications",
issn = "2662-9992",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan UK",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Greenlash in the media

AU - Tao, Yingnian

AU - Ryan, Mark

PY - 2025/7/1

Y1 - 2025/7/1

N2 - This study uses metadata visualisation and corpus linguistics to examine patterns of representation of the emerging term greenlash in media reports, as retrieved from the Nexis news database. The metadata analysis reveals that media coverage of greenlash has surged since 2021, predominantly in left leaning European and North American media sources. Through Sketch Engine, collocation analysis identified core thematic areas surrounding greenlash: definition and resistance, status, actor, cause and impact, and location. Our findings indicate that greenlash is primarily a European phenomenon, which may be attributed to a lack of mainstream outlets through which actors can voice opposition to climate policies. The phenomenon is largely driven by economic concerns, in response to specific policies perceived to impose financial burdens on protesting groups. Moreover, our analysis reveals that media organisations often introduce the term greenlash as broad, generalised public opposition to environmental policies rather than a complex, economically driven opposition to specific policies, and portray this opposition in a negative light. We suggest that media organisations may downplay these elements in opposition to neoliberal or populist ideologies or to retain readership. This phenomenon thus highlights the complex intersection between environmental policies, economic burdens, and political divisions underscoring the broader tensions and paradoxes surrounding climate action and socio-economic disparities.

AB - This study uses metadata visualisation and corpus linguistics to examine patterns of representation of the emerging term greenlash in media reports, as retrieved from the Nexis news database. The metadata analysis reveals that media coverage of greenlash has surged since 2021, predominantly in left leaning European and North American media sources. Through Sketch Engine, collocation analysis identified core thematic areas surrounding greenlash: definition and resistance, status, actor, cause and impact, and location. Our findings indicate that greenlash is primarily a European phenomenon, which may be attributed to a lack of mainstream outlets through which actors can voice opposition to climate policies. The phenomenon is largely driven by economic concerns, in response to specific policies perceived to impose financial burdens on protesting groups. Moreover, our analysis reveals that media organisations often introduce the term greenlash as broad, generalised public opposition to environmental policies rather than a complex, economically driven opposition to specific policies, and portray this opposition in a negative light. We suggest that media organisations may downplay these elements in opposition to neoliberal or populist ideologies or to retain readership. This phenomenon thus highlights the complex intersection between environmental policies, economic burdens, and political divisions underscoring the broader tensions and paradoxes surrounding climate action and socio-economic disparities.

KW - greenlash

KW - resistance

KW - environmental policies

KW - media communication

KW - neoliberalism

KW - collocation analysis

KW - corpus linguistics

U2 - 10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7

DO - 10.1057/s41599-025-05324-7

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - Humanities and Social Sciences Communications

JF - Humanities and Social Sciences Communications

SN - 2662-9992

M1 - 970

ER -