This article explores the phenomenon of the use of ICT for climate change activism in the Pacific. Climate change activism in the Pacific is characterised by the use of ICT tools such as social media. The article draws on semi-structured interviews and an analysis of social media sites to examine the use of social media in Pacific climate change campaigns. While other campaigns such as relating to West Papua have also been facilitated by social media, it has been generally NGO, citizen-led and varied in Pacific government support. In contrast, climate change campaigns in the Pacific are fully supported at the NGO, citizen, and state levels. Furthermore, while early Pacific ICT-based climate change campaigns used iconic images of Pacific Islanders leaving their homelands, more recent campaigns have leveraged social media to depict Pacific Islanders not as victims but as ‘warriors’. This new imagery aims to empower Pacific Islanders and engender a regional Pacific identity that shows strength and solidarity on the Pacific’s stance towards climate change.
History
Publication title
Pacific Journalism Review
Volume
23
Pagination
133-149
ISSN
1023-9499
Department/School
TSBE
Publisher
Auckland University of Technology * Tuwhera Open Access Publishing
Place of publication
New Zealand
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 Jason Titifanue, Romitesh Kant, Glen Finau, Jope Tarai. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Repository Status
Open
Socio-economic Objectives
Global effects of climate change (excl. Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica and the South Pacific) (excl. social impacts); Media services not elsewhere classified