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Routledge handbook on climate crisis communication / edited by Alison Anderson and Candice Howarth.

Routledge Handbooks Online Humanities and Social Sciences Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Anderson, Alison, 1965- editor.
Howarth, Candice, editor.
Series:
Routledge environment and sustainability handbooks.
Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks Series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Climatic changes--Press coverage.
Climatic changes.
Communication in science.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (439 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, [2025]
Summary:
This Handbook provides a state-of-the-art review of leading research on climate change communication.
Contents:
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Introduction
Part one Conceptual challenges
1 Framing in climate crisis communication: an overview of research across frame production, media frames, audience frames, and framing effects
2 Climate change as a post-political issue
3 Deliberation and democratic innovations in the climate crisis
4 Multi-level miscommunication: on fragmented communications and mismatched framings of climate crisis in multi-level governance
5 Talk about it: the role of private-sphere conversations in climate crisis communication
Part two Methodological considerations
6 Narrative analysis: the ideological dimensions of climate discourse
7 Approaches to climate change visual research: methods, audiences, practices
8 Co-production approaches in climate communication
9 Discourse analysis in climate communication
10 Online research methods: designing studies of digital climate communications
Part three Communicating climate science across cultures
11 Transnational climate justice: anti-authoritarian climate movements and digital media in a (post-)pandemic world
12 Climate justice and the media: the representation of Indigenous communities and climate migrants/refugees
13 Climate change crisis communication in Asia: state of the research field and case studies from India, Indonesia, and Malaysia
14 Exploring the multilayered landscape of climate change communication in East Asia: a social process perspective
15 Climate change communication research: a Latin American perspective
Part four Journalism and news reportage
16 Climate change in legacy and online news media: reviewing scholarly literature on production, presentation, and consumption.
17 Voices from the "front lines" of environmental crisis: supporting climate change journalism in the Global South
18 Affordances of social media networks for climate change communication: potentialities and constraints
19 Conspiracies as one of the dangers of online climate change communication: origins, spread, and impact
20 Climate crisis and an injunction to care: exploring women's reportage on disasters in Australia
Part five Activism and social movements
21 Digital activism and transnational movements: climate change protest in the digital age
22 Climate movement message construction: a three-pronged challenge of collective identity, actions, and words
23 Youth activism and the call for generational responsibility in climate politics
24 Climate justice pedagogy: integrating science, activism, and care
25 The challenge of being "trusted messengers" on climate change: practical strategies for more effective climate change teaching in higher education
Part six Audiences and popular culture
26 The walk, the talk, and the misdirection: digitalization and the deflection of climate crisis in US and UK screen culture
27 Influencer or opinion leader? Different approaches to defining and identifying environmentally conscious individuals on social media
28 Promoting veganism: the cultural role of celebrities and influencers in the reframing of meat and dairy as a climate issue
29 Good-natured climate comedy to the rescue
30 Communicating climate change on TikTok
Part seven Future directions
31 Sustainable journalism in a crisis: taking agency and authorship
32 Sense-making: how interpretive journalism shapes media coverage of climate change
33 Where next for carbon literacy? Tackling climate misinformation and addressing climate (in)justice
Index.
Notes:
Includes index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
1-04-036132-3
1-003-04425-5
1-04-036129-3
9781003044253
OCLC:
1519490338

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