Sentences with phrase «on climate change communications»

Posted in Change is our Choice: Creating Climate Solutions, NWEI Discussion Courses, Powering a Bright Future, Take Action Tagged climate marches 2015, climate talks in Paris 2015, discussing global warming with family and friends, historic climate mobilization, more think global warming will harm them personally, UN Climate talks, Yale Project on Climate Change Communications Comments closed
His book, Don't Even Think About It, is widely regarded as one of the most important books published on climate change communications.
by Deborah McNamara on December 3, 2015 0 climate marches 2015 climate talks in Paris 2015 discussing global warming with family and friends historic climate mobilization more think global warming will harm them personally UN Climate talks Yale Project on Climate Change Communications
Our approaches are informed largely by research from the Frameworks Institute, the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, and the Union of Concerned Scientists, among others.
Ordinary people can't be experts on everything, so most folks look to people they respect — church leaders, the president, neighbors — for cues on issues of expertise, like climate change, said Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
«Certainly a lot of people paid attention to it, and it sparked a very good conversation about what we're up against,» says Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
Regardless of how closely they pay attention to scientific revelations about climate change and its connections to hurricanes, voters are increasingly worried about climate change, according to a new poll from the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication released yesterday.
According to a poll conducted by researchers at Yale University's Project on Climate Change Communication, four out of five Americans reported personally experiencing one or more types of extreme weather or a natural disaster in 2011, while more than a third were personally harmed either a great deal or a moderate amount by one or more of these events.
The jump accounts for the single biggest change among all voting groups, and it could symbolize a softening among conservatives on an issue that has sharply divided the political parties, according to Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
The latest polling from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication shows that belief in the reality of climate change, and concern about its effects, are at their highest levels since 2008.
To support the continued evolution of parks and public spaces as resources for climate change education, the Institute will convene Parks: The New Climate Classroom, our premier conference on climate change communication, Nov. 7 — 8, 2013 at Cavallo Point Lodge in San Francisco.
(The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication has done a lot of work revealing how powerfully such cultural and ideological predispositions shape views of the phenomenon too loosely called «global warming.»)
For those that don't know, the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication is an excellent source.
Here's a quick look beyond climate and energy beliefs and words to climate and energy deeds, provided in the latest report on American's actions related to energy conservation and greenhouse gases from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University.
Anthony Leiserowitz, the director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, has distributed a note summarizing the findings of «What's In A Name?
The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication «undertook this project because most of the action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and prepare for climate impacts is happening at the state and local levels of American society.
At a time when public opinion about climate change is all over the map, we are excited to share this new interactive maping tool, Yale Climate Opinion Maps (from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication).
After many years of working at Greenpeace and other environmental and indigenous - rights groups, he founded Britain's Climate Outreach and Information Network and has also helped develop Talking Climate, an online «gateway to research on climate change communication
Anthony Leiserowitz, the director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and a leader of the Six Americas project, added this valuable context on the graph I posted above:
Regular readers may recall my 2013 post describing how «energy agreement» is often «hidden by climate disputes» — drawing on data from a sustained survey by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication.
beliefs and attitudes about global warming public policy and climate change research on climate change and public opinion Yale Opinion Climate Maps Yale Project on Climate Change Communication
Bear in mind this heresy comes from someone who has worked directly on climate change communication in many ways, and will continue to.
Last month the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication released its «Faith, Morality and the Environment: Portraits of Global Warming's Six Americas» report, which explores Americans» receptivity to a moral framing around the issue of climate change.
Here in the US, the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication just released the first report from its latest national survey: Climate Change in the American Mind.
role of empathy in environmental movement the moral and spiritual implications of global warming Yale Project on Climate Change Communication
As the «Six Americas» surveys run by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication have shown, there's plenty of common ground on energy innovation and incentives for efficiency, so it's possible to have a constructive conversation on global warming science and at least some solutions across a range of ideologies.
Most climate change communication, like Showtime's Years of Living Dangerously and the American Academy for the Advancement of Science's What We Know campaign, websites like Climate Central and Real Climate, or academic programs like Yale's Project on Climate Change Communication and George Mason University's Center for Climate Change Communication, is predicated on the belief that if people know the facts about climate change and finally understand just how serious the problem is, they will surely raise their voices and demand that our governments and business leaders DO SOMETHING!
The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication has released «Politics and Global Warming: Democrats, Republicans, Independents and the Tea Party,» a new survey full of interesting findings.
A Times story earlier this week on social and political factors behind the climate change silence included a telling bit of data from Yale's Program on Climate Change Communication.
As I mentioned on Twitter, a related pattern was evident in the 2009 survey of attitudes on energy and climate undertaken by the «Six Americas» project of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication.
To see the relationship between extreme weather and public attitudes on human - driven climate change, check out the latest report from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication — «Extreme Weather and Climate Change in the American Mind April 2013.»
I pivot to a description of the valuable «Six Americas» surveys on climate change attitudes led by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and show a set of slides, posted here, that illustrate how climate disputes hide energy agreement:
Anthony Leiserowitz of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication says museums are one of the few places where adults can interact with science throughout their lives.
«People who prior said don't know are increasingly saying they don't believe it,» said Anthony Leiserowitz, the director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, which released the new results today (Jan. 16).
The results echo a similar study undertaken by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, which found that Americans «support setting strict limits on carbon dioxide emissions from existing coal - fired plants,» by a nearly 2 - to - 1 margin — «even if the cost of electricity to consumers and companies increases.»
Ed Maibach and I highlighted and reviewed these strategies in a primer for heath professionals on climate change communication released earlier this spring.
So what to make of a study from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication (backed up by a similar Washington Post-ABC News poll) showing that the majority of Americans, across the political spectrum, support the limiting of carbon pollution from power plants — also known as the very thing that the EPA proposed?
In a recent survey by Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, they rejected the science of global warming even more strongly than average Republicans did.
According to a report from the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, 17 percent of Americans say the pope's stance on global warming has shaped their view of the issue.
Perhaps you are for the sophisticated government financed campaign at the Yale Project On Climate Change Communication?
A 2012 research report from Yale University's Project on Climate Change Communication found that placing the conversation within a public - health frame was more likely «to elicit emotional reactions consistent with support for climate change mitigation and adaptation» than a traditional environmental frame, or even one focused on national security.
Affiliation Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America
And a poll conducted by the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication in September and October found that 71 percent of Americans said it was at least somewhat «important» for the world to reach an agreement on climate change in Paris, with 43 percent of respondents saying it was «very» or «extremely» important (percentage of respondents saying it was «important» are rounded up when added together):
New Haven, CT: Yale Project on Climate Change Communication (retrieved Apr. 20, 2012).
Their argument was faulty, but their motivation was clear: A study out just this week from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication found that knowing just how great the 97 percent consensus is can act as a «gateway belief» for understanding climate change.
Those numbers come from the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication.
According to the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, only 1 in 10 Americans knows that there's near - consensus among scientists that climate change is real and caused by humans.
Richard Somerville leads a workshop on climate change communication at the University of Delaware in 2013.
These findings come from a nationally - representative survey (Climate Change in the American Mind) conducted by the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication.
Climategate had a substantial impact on public opinion, according to Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication.
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