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Who speaks for the climate? : making sense of media reporting on climate change
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Who speaks for the climate? : making sense of media reporting on climate change

Author: Maxwell T Boykoff
Publisher: Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011.
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
"The public rely upon media representations to help interpret and make sense of the many complexities relating to climate science and governance. Media representations of climate issues - from news to entertainment - are powerful and important links between people's everyday realities and experiences, and the ways in which they are discussed by scientists, policymakers and public actors. A dynamic mix of influences  Read more...
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Details

Material Type: Internet resource
Document Type: Book, Internet Resource
All Authors / Contributors: Maxwell T Boykoff
ISBN: 9780521115841 0521115841 9780521133050 052113305X
OCLC Number: 727702120
Description: xii, 228 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
Contents: The world stage: cultural politics and climate change --
Roots and culture: exploring media coverage of climate change through history --
Fight semantic drift: confronting issue conflation --
Placing climate complexity in context --
Climate stories: how journalistic norms shape media content --
Signals and noise: covering human contributions to climate change --
Carbonundrums: media consumption in the public sphere --
A light in the attic?: ongoing media representations of climate change.
Responsibility: Maxwell T. Boykoff.
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Abstract:

This study makes sense of how the media report on climate change and how this influences science and policy decision-making.  Read more...

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'People's understandings of climate change are shaped more by the media and their cacophony of voices than they are by the systematic enquiries and endeavours of climate scientists. Boykoff's Who Read more...

 
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schema:description""The public rely upon media representations to help interpret and make sense of the many complexities relating to climate science and governance. Media representations of climate issues - from news to entertainment - are powerful and important links between people's everyday realities and experiences, and the ways in which they are discussed by scientists, policymakers and public actors. A dynamic mix of influences - from internal workings of mass media such as journalistic norms, to external political, economic, cultural and social factors - shape what becomes a climate 'story'. Providing a bridge between academic considerations and real world developments, this book helps students, academic researchers and interested members of the public make sense of media reporting on climate change as it explores 'who speaks for climate' and what effects this may have on the spectrum of possible responses to contemporary climate challenges"--"
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