Irene Neverla
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Irene Neverla (born 11 February 1952) is an
Austria Austria, , bar, Östareich officially the Republic of Austria, is a country in the southern part of Central Europe, lying in the Eastern Alps. It is a federation of nine states, one of which is the capital, Vienna, the most populous ...
n professor of communication. Neverla chairs the Austrian state broadcaster's advisory board.


Life

Neverla was born in
Graz Graz (; sl, Gradec) is the capital city of the Austrian state of Styria and second-largest city in Austria after Vienna. As of 1 January 2021, it had a population of 331,562 (294,236 of whom had principal-residence status). In 2018, the popul ...
in 1952. She first studied journalism at the Vienna International Press Centre, before she studied Irene Neverla studied communication science, sociology and psychology at the Universities of Vienna and Salzburg. She gained her doctorate at the
University of Munich The Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (simply University of Munich or LMU; german: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München) is a public research university in Munich, Germany. It is Germany's List of universities in Germany, sixth-oldest u ...
. In 1992 she became a professor at the Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences at the University of Hamburg , specializing in journalism and communication sciences. In 1980 she published her study ''Female journalists: women in a male profession'' noting that women were in the minority and there was a natural expectation that men would take the lead in discussions. Her research focuses on journalism and reception research, visual communication , environmental, scientific and climate communication with a focus on climate change. After her retirement in September 2017, she accepted an honorary professorship in the Department of Political and Social Sciences at Freie Universität Berlin in 2018 and began teaching at the Institute for Journalism and Communication Sciences. In 2022 she took part in a panel discussion at the Freie Universität Berlin asking "Can the world still be saved?" with Antje Wilton, the journalist Sara Schurmann, Simon Horst and Carolin Schwegler. In the same year she spoke out against the plans of of the Austrian state broadcaster to halve the amount of text they have on line to replace it with video. Neverla chairs the broadcaster's advisory board and said this was a mistake as although video was useful it was text that was the core of good jounrnalism and communication.


Selected works

* ''Environmental Journalism'', 2014 (editor with Henrik Bødker) * ''Media, Communication and the Struggle for Democratic Change: Case Studies on Contested Transitions''


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Neverla, Irene 1952 births Living people People from Graz Academic staff of the University of Hamburg Climate activists University of Vienna alumni University of Salzburg alumni