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A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis

Like many other urban areas around the world, Cape Town, South Africa relies on governmental management authorities to ensure water supply. Recently, a three year drought from 2015 to 2018 caused a major water shortage, threatening water supply to the city. In response, the City engaged in multiple...

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Main Author: Hill, Erin
Other Authors: Scott, Diane
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hill, Erin
author2 Scott, Diane
author_browse Hill, Erin
Scott, Diane
author_facet Scott, Diane
Hill, Erin
author_sort Hill, Erin
collection Thesis
description Like many other urban areas around the world, Cape Town, South Africa relies on governmental management authorities to ensure water supply. Recently, a three year drought from 2015 to 2018 caused a major water shortage, threatening water supply to the city. In response, the City engaged in multiple mitigation efforts, amongst which was a major communications campaign to inform the public and encourage conservation behaviour. Drawing on literature on water crisis management and framing theory, this thesis analyses how the water crisis was framed in communications made available online by the City of Cape Town (CCT) to the public between March 2017 and March 2018. To answer this question, the project adopted a frames study approach to determine the types and characteristics of communication items released by the City of Cape Town, as the water managing authority, during the recent water crisis. The study established that a range of frames were employed by the CCT in communicating the drought. Through an analysis of the trends in the framing of the water crisis messages the study further identified the shifts in framing and messaging throughout the water crisis response period. Six key frames were identified, namely ‘the City success story'; ‘obscurity and ambiguity'; ‘consumption is key'; ‘the situation is controllable'; ‘together we can beat the drought'; and ‘us versus them'. It was found that while there may have been a lack of strategic planning regarding public communications which resulted in conflated messages, the City's communications campaign was nonetheless effective in that it correlated with a significant drop in private – individual and household – water consumption which delayed Day Zero (when water supply would be cut-off and daily water rations would only be available at collection points for the public). The key implication of this study is that despite contradictions, idiosyncrasies and lack of planning, a heterogenous range of messages in communicating a crisis can reach and evoke appropriate responses from multiple audiences of the public.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32663 A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis Hill, Erin Scott, Diane Taylor, Anna Cape Town 2017-2018 water crisis communications Like many other urban areas around the world, Cape Town, South Africa relies on governmental management authorities to ensure water supply. Recently, a three year drought from 2015 to 2018 caused a major water shortage, threatening water supply to the city. In response, the City engaged in multiple mitigation efforts, amongst which was a major communications campaign to inform the public and encourage conservation behaviour. Drawing on literature on water crisis management and framing theory, this thesis analyses how the water crisis was framed in communications made available online by the City of Cape Town (CCT) to the public between March 2017 and March 2018. To answer this question, the project adopted a frames study approach to determine the types and characteristics of communication items released by the City of Cape Town, as the water managing authority, during the recent water crisis. The study established that a range of frames were employed by the CCT in communicating the drought. Through an analysis of the trends in the framing of the water crisis messages the study further identified the shifts in framing and messaging throughout the water crisis response period. Six key frames were identified, namely ‘the City success story'; ‘obscurity and ambiguity'; ‘consumption is key'; ‘the situation is controllable'; ‘together we can beat the drought'; and ‘us versus them'. It was found that while there may have been a lack of strategic planning regarding public communications which resulted in conflated messages, the City's communications campaign was nonetheless effective in that it correlated with a significant drop in private – individual and household – water consumption which delayed Day Zero (when water supply would be cut-off and daily water rations would only be available at collection points for the public). The key implication of this study is that despite contradictions, idiosyncrasies and lack of planning, a heterogenous range of messages in communicating a crisis can reach and evoke appropriate responses from multiple audiences of the public. 2021-01-25T10:39:22Z 2021-01-25T10:39:22Z 2020 2021-01-25T10:37:30Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32663 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Cape Town
2017-2018 water crisis
communications
Hill, Erin
A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
title_full A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
title_fullStr A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
title_full_unstemmed A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
title_short A flood of communications in a drought: a frame analysis of the City of Cape Town's communications during the 2017-2018 water crisis
title_sort flood of communications in a drought a frame analysis of the city of cape town s communications during the 2017 2018 water crisis
topic Cape Town
2017-2018 water crisis
communications
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32663
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