%0 Journal Article %T Comparing Climate Change Coverage in Canadian English and French-Language Print Media: Environmental Values, Media Cultures, and the Narration of Global Warming %A Nathan Young %A Eric Dugas %J The Canadian Journal of Sociology %D 2012 %I University of Alberta %X This article compares how climate change is presented in English- andFrench-language print media in Canada. In recent years, climate change has become an increasingly divisive issue, with the media playing a central role in the promotion of competing claims and narratives in the public sphere. Using concepts from environmental sociology and the sociology of journalism, we examine content from six English- and two French-language newspapers from 2007¨C2008 (N=2,249), and find significant evidence of both convergence and divergence across the language divide. Among the most significant findings are differences in how complexity is handled: English outlets present diverse coveragethat is highly compartmentalized, while the French newspapers present a narrower range of coverage but with thematically richer articles that better link climate change issues to the realms of culture, politics, and economy. %K climate change %K media %K language %K journalism %K environmental values %K framing %U http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/9733/13563