Hanna MorrisProfile page
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Arts and Science, School of the Environment
- Assistant ProfessorFaculty of Arts and Science, School of the Environment
BIO
Dr. Hanna E. Morris is an Assistant Professor at the School of the Environment at the University of Toronto with expertise in climate change media and critical methods of cultural analysis. Her research concentrates on the climate-media-democracy nexus and explores questions of power, identity-formation, and meaning-making around climate change. She is the co-chair of the Critical Studies of Climate Media, Discourse, and Power Working Group a part of Brown University’s Climate Social Science Network (CSSN) and an appointed member of the Board of Directors for the International Environmental Communication Association (IECA).
Her newest book is entitled Apocalyptic Authoritarianism: Climate Crisis, Media, and Power (Oxford University Press, 2025). The book reveals how national anxieties following the 2016 presidential election of Donald Trump have shaped American news coverage of climate change in ways that severely limit how it has come to be known, imagined, and contended with. Looking at climate change reporting across prominent and ideologically diverse U.S. newspapers and magazines over the past decade, the book traces how news media create an illusion of control in the present through nostalgic and heroic stories of the past. Morris identifies a new mode of reactionary politics called "apocalyptic authoritarianism" to describe the post-2016 alignment of historically privileged figures united by a common enemy of the "new" New Left and a shared appeal to fears of "total crisis." This antidemocratic paradigm portends national and planetary disarray if progressive social and climate justice "warriors" are not controlled at home and if "unruly masses" of climate migrants are not contained abroad. In addition to contending with the implications of apocalyptic authoritarianism, Morris also calls for more robust forms of climate journalism and politics capable of facilitating—not impeding—radically democratic responses to climate change.
Her research and writing have been published in various academic journals and popular media outlets including Environmental Communication, Journal of Language and Politics, Journal of Environmental Media, Media Theory, Politique Américaine, Places Journal, Reading the Pictures, and Earth Island Journal, among others. She also co-edited the book entitled Climate Change and Journalism: Negotiating Rifts of Time (Routledge, 2021). Her scholarship has been recognized by the Connaught New Researcher Award, IAMCR Stuart Hall Award, New Directions for Climate Communication Research Fellowship, and Top Paper Awards from the International Communication Association and Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences.
ACADEMIC POSITIONS
- Assistant ProfessorUniversity of Toronto, School of the Environment, Toronto, Canada1 Jul 2022 - present
- Postdoctoral FellowUniversity of Pennsylvania, Annenberg School for Communication, Philadelphia, United StatesSep 2021 - Jul 2022
DEGREES
- PhD, CommunicationUniversity of Pennsylvania, Annenberg School for Communication, Philadelphia, United States2021
- MA, CommunicationUniversity of Pennsylvania, Annenberg School for Communication, Philadelphia, United States2018
- MSc, Media and CommunicationsLondon School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Media and Communications, London, United Kingdom2016
- BS, Society and Environment, Minor in HistoryUniversity of California, Berkeley, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, Berkeley, United States2015
AVAILABILITY
- Media enquiries
- Masters Research or PhD student supervision
- Join a web conference as a panellist or speaker
- Membership of an advisory committee
- Collaborative projects