Changing the Climate Conversation

Small World Stories

How can communicators change the climate conversation? After experiencing climate change firsthand when the 2019/2020 Australian bush fires ripped through our community, we're on a mission to find out why this issue is still so divisive, crippling action. We're asking leading thinkers, scientists, experts, activists and optimists how communicators can change the climate conversation and inspire much more action. read less
NewsNews

Episodes

Connecting the Dots with Esmeralda de Belgique
Feb 9 2021
Connecting the Dots with Esmeralda de Belgique
Climate change is not just about what’s happening to our planet, but about how it’s affecting our economies, health and every aspect of our lives. Most of us know that now. But for too long climate stories were framed as an environmental issue only, missing the connection to our everyday lives. In this episode Macarena Aguilar talks to veteran journalist and activist, Esmeralda de Belgique, about how this approach has contributed to delaying collective action to address the biggest challenge of our times. Esmeralda has been involved with the environment and climate justice movements for decades.  She is active in the boards of some of the largest environmental organizations, like WWF and Greenpeace; and she heads the conservation foundation that she inherited from her father, the late King Leopold III of Belgium. As a member of the Belgium royal family, Esmeralda has often leveraged her position to advocate for climate justice. In this interview she explains how she joined the 2019 Extinction Rebellion landmark protests in London to get arrested and galvanize support for the cause. You will also hear her call for a lot more people to join the peaceful street demonstrations and praise today’s climate youth advocates, who she believes are the most effective climate change messengers of our times. Useful links and resources we reference in the episode2010: Terre!: Agissons pour la planète, il n´est past trop tard. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Terre-Agissons-pour-planète-tard/dp/2873866829/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&qid=1601985383&refinements=p_27:Esmeralda+de+Belgique&s=books&sr=1-1Articles published by Esmeralda de Belgique: https://www.lecho.be/auteur/Esmeralda-de-Belgique.71541.htmlCoverage of Esmeralda de Belgique’s arrest in London: https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/extinction-rebellion-london-belgian-princess-esmerelda-arrest-billingsgate-climate-latest-news-a9153621.htmlEsmeralda de Belgique speaks to Paris Match about the need for a “climate revolution: https://www.parismatch.com/Royal-Blog/famille-royale-belge/Esmeralda-de-Belgique-Il-faut-une-revolution-pour-le-climat-1593613Be sure to subscribe to Changing the Climate Conversation for alerts when new episodes drop: Apple, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts from! Stay up to date with news from Small World Stories on Linkedin, Facebook and TwitterFollow Macarena Aguilar, the episode’s host, on Twitter, LinkedIn
Reporting from the Climate Change Frontlines with Sue Stephenson
Jan 27 2021
Reporting from the Climate Change Frontlines with Sue Stephenson
In Australia, there is a disconnect between those who experience climate change in rural areas and how it is reported in national newsrooms. In this episode Rebecca talks to award winning Australian journalist Sue Stephenson about why firsthand rural perspectives and solutions are so important for changing the climate conversation.   As a young, ambitious journalist Sue got her start at a country newspaper in Northern New South Wales. But it wasn’t long before Sue’s talent for storytelling was noticed and she was eventually offered a job in Sydney as a television journalist with the Seven Network. From there she went on to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) where she was the founding executive producer of the national broadcaster’s first 24-hour news channel. Today, in her latest role as a lecturer at University of Technology Sydney’s Journalism school, Sue is working hard to equip the next generation of multimedia reporters as they prepare to enter the workforce in an era of toxic climate politics and uncertainty.   At the height of Australia’s so called recent ‘Black Summer’ in late 2019 and early 2020, Sue sent a group of young city-based student reporters into the regional communities hardest hit by the fires. Their findings were surprising and powerful. Their reporting brought to life the human face of climate change, so rarely seen in the Australian media. They returned with a practical understanding of the many ways that climate change is already affecting so many people in regional Australia, and how country people are already adapting. We need more reporting like this says Sue.     Useful links and resources we reference in the episode  Climate Council (2016), “On the Frontline: Climate Change and Rural Communities”: https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/resources/ruralreport/ UTS Journalism launches regional reporting project: https://www.uts.edu.au/about/faculty-arts-and-social-sciences/news/uts-journalism-launches-regional-reporting-projectCentral News UTS: https://centralnews.com.au The Solutions Journalism Network, “Reporting on Climate Change from a Solutions Lens”: https://thewholestory.solutionsjournalism.org/reporting-on-climate-change-from-a-solutions-lens-765e57e28724Be sure to subscribe to Changing the Climate Conversation for alerts when new episodes drop: Apple, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts from! Stay up to date with news from Small World Stories on Linkedin, Facebook and TwitterFollow Rebecca Lake, the episode’s host, on Instagram: @Rebeccalake_1