MUCS - Media Use in Crisis Situations
MUCS (Media Use in Crisis Situations: Resolving Information Paradoxes, Comparing Climate Change and COVID-19) studies media use in complex societal crisis situations, comparing the pandemic and the climate crisis. The project is a collaboration between media studies, human geography and journalism studies. We analyze how people in Norway encounter these issues in everyday life and in the media, where information is abundant across digital platforms.
About the research project
MUCS (Media Use in Crisis Situations: Resolving Information Paradoxes, Comparing Climate Change and COVID-19) studies media use in crisis situations, comparing climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic. The project is a collaboration between media studies, human geography and journalism studies. We analyze how people in Norway encounter these issues in everyday life and in the media, where information is abundant across platforms.
The objective of the project is to resolve paradoxes in the communication of crisis in digital societies. Why do we accept drastic measures to fight the pandemic, while similar climate action is difficult to accomplish? There is extensive media coverage warning of a climate crisis, but we do not know enough about how this information is interpreted. The pandemic is perceived differently in terms of speed, proximity and impact on our lives. By comparing these cases, we learn more about information in different crisis situations, and build resilience in the face of future and unknown risks.
The project focuses on media use. Media are key to how experts and governing bodies communicate, and risk management depends on communication to mobilize and maintain trust. Social media, journalism, smartphones and digital platforms are all part of how citizens relate to society. We study these and other examples in a cross-media perspective, analyzing how Norwegians use a variety of media in their everyday lives. We are particularly interested in digitalization, and in understanding the challenges and opportunities new technologies bring forward to crisis communication.
The project conducts qualitative research, including interviews about media use pertaining to climate and COVID-19, and ethnographic studies of these issues in local communities in Norway. We collaborate with stakeholders in climate and crisis communication to develop actionable knowledge.
Partners:
Featured
Publications
Recent publications
How people make sense of climate issues in the news (2025) Hallvard Moe, Brita Ytre-Arne og Solveig Høegh-Krohn
Climate Change Is an Intangible News Topic: A Qualitative Analysis of Audience Perceptions (2025) Solveig Høegh-Krohn, Håvard Haarstad and Brita Ytre-Arne
Transferred expectations of human presence: Folk theories among older adults who are inexperienced users of online services (2024) Hilde Sakariassen and Brita Ytre-Arne.
Polarisation and echo chambers? Making sense of the climate issue with social media in everyday life (2023) - Hallvard Moe, Synnøve Skarbø Lindtner and Brita Ytre-Arne
Citizens´news use during Covid-19: Concerns about misinformation and reliance on local news in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden (2023) - Brita Ytre-Arne and Hallvard Moe
Monitoring the infection rate: Explaining the meaning of matrics in pandemic news experiences (2023) - John Magnus Ragnhildson Dahl and Brita Ytre-Arne
People
Project manager
Brita Ytre-Arne Prosjektleder, professor
Project members
Hallvard Moe Professor
Håvard Haarstad Professoe
Hilde Sakariassen Postdoktor
Ida Kvilhaug Sekanina Phd-kandidat
Jannie Møller Hartley Professor, Roskilde Universitet
Solveig Høegh-Krohn Forsker
Contact
- Emails
- brita.ytre-arne@uib.no