March 25, 2025
Introduction:
Read more here: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1078108(Eurekalert) There’s no getting around it: staying on top of the world’s environmental challenges can be a grim experience. Climate change, floods, wildfires, collapsing biodiversity — it’s enough to turn many readers off the news entirely.
To push back against this relentless tide of negativity, some journalists engage in a practice called solutions journalism. This approach uses standard journalistic methods to present behaviours, actions and strategies that can mitigate, reverse or help us adapt to environmental damage: in other words, offer solutions to existing problems.
There has been a noticeable shift in the Canadian media landscape toward solutions journalism over the past decades, and leading that transition are the country’s independent alternative media outlets.
In a paper published in the journal Environmental Communication, two Concordia researchers study the frequency of solutions journalism in environmental reporting in seven Canadian alternative media outlets. Through content analysis and interviews with reporters, the researchers found that the practice requires strong institutional support, even when climate journalism is an integral part of a given outlet’s coverage.
“If a newsroom does not have an environment that is nurturing toward solutions journalism, it won’t happen, even in organizations like alternative media outlets where it is part of their mission,” says study co-author Amélie Daoust-Boisvert, an associate professor in the Department of Journalism.

