In spite of the well-documented links between global warming and the animal-based
diet, human dietary choices have been only timidly problematized by legacy media
in the recent decades. Research on news reporting of the connection between the
animal-based diet and climate change shows a clear coverage deficit in traditional
journalism. In order to reflect on the reasons for this failure, this paper discusses moral
anthropocentrism as the human-supremacist moral stance at the roots of mainstream
ethics ...
In spite of the well-documented links between global warming and the animal-based
diet, human dietary choices have been only timidly problematized by legacy media
in the recent decades. Research on news reporting of the connection between the
animal-based diet and climate change shows a clear coverage deficit in traditional
journalism. In order to reflect on the reasons for this failure, this paper discusses moral
anthropocentrism as the human-supremacist moral stance at the roots of mainstream
ethics and the climate crisis. Accordingly, the animal-based food taboo is defined here
as our reluctance not only to change but to even discuss changing our food habits,
a strong evidence that moral anthropocentrism is not addressed as a problem, which
amounts to a type of denial. Through a literature review conducted on the most relevant
comparative studies of deontological codes, this paper shows that codes of journalism
do not escape moral anthropocentrism, and thus contribute to prevent journalists from
stressing the relevant role diet plays in our ethics and sustainability efforts. The paper
ends by suggesting ways to expand and update media ethics and deontological codes
in journalism to dismantle both the taboo and the moral anthropocentric stance it is
based on.
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