Given the stakes here — this is the biggest news
story about climate change in quite some time — I think it is important to examine this charge.
is a must read for anyone wishing to know the real
story about climate change.
First let me explain some of the standard
story about climate change and population fluctuations.
[Editor's note: This is the latest in a semi-regular series whose purpose is to correct the record whenever New York Magazine's Jonathan Chait writes
a story about climate change politics or policy]
We wrote the book because we stumbled across the story, we didn't set out to write
a story about climate change denial.
I wonder how many AP and Reuters
story about climate change that get reported (falsely, let's say, with incorrect data) also get this followup treatment?
And so there are compelling reasons to use fierce ones to tell
a story about climate change.
Amid all the bad news
stories about climate change, the rise of renewables is one of the good news stories.
Unfortunately, Alice feels all alone at home when she reads
stories about climate change or sees them on TV.
Is his complaint that some Exxon money ended up as a site that directs people to the latest
stories about climate change written from a sceptic's perspective?
What are some of our most compelling
stories about climate change impact on animals in our collection?
The most alarming
stories about climate change rest where there is the least data.
Anxiety can be reduced simply by restricting exposure to distressing information, such as by skipping news
stories about climate change or disengaging from conversations.
The average person instinctively understands that cause - and - effect relationships exist but they don't think through the fact that most of the news
stories about climate change impacts place the effect (disaster, potential disaster) before the cause (it has to get warmer first).
That is why Gummer et al are forced to invent
stories about climate change, and conspiracy theories to explain away criticism of their political agenda and the failure of their policies.
Climate Matters seeks to help correct that systematic misperception — by enabling journalists to tell local, science - based
stories about climate change — because climate change is already causing harmful impacts in every region of our nation.
Instead of terrifying the public with scare
stories about climate change caused by CO2 emissions, why aren't governments actually doing something about it by replacing fossil - fuel power stations with nuclear ones (and crushing any protests which try to stop them)?
Not exact matches
As part of our work to insert the
stories and perspectives of moms into the national conversation
about climate change, Moms Clean Air Force DC fielded a large and visible contingent of 20 moms and kids to attend the Rally for Climate Justice in September, 2015, to mark Pope Francis» climate leadership on the day of his address to the US Co
climate change, Moms Clean Air Force DC fielded a large and visible contingent of 20 moms and kids to attend the Rally for
Climate Justice in September, 2015, to mark Pope Francis» climate leadership on the day of his address to the US Co
Climate Justice in September, 2015, to mark Pope Francis»
climate leadership on the day of his address to the US Co
climate leadership on the day of his address to the US Congress.
In particular it might help to frame the
story in terms not so much of potentially devastating consequences in distant parts of the world, but in terms of more local impacts of the
climate changing and what people are doing
about it.
Such
stories are one indication of how media narratives
about climate change are becoming more
about hope and opportunity and less
about the more traditional doom and gloom.
All that struck me as a great setting for a
story about a plausible collision between economics and
climate change.
That's the conclusion of a 5 - year study, which found that when news organizations ran a number of
stories on controversial topics like water quality and
climate change in close succession, they significantly boosted public conversations
about these topics — and even
changed some people's minds.
(Read Douglas Fox's
story about this research expedition in «The Ground Zero of
Climate Change,» DISCOVER, September 2008.)
I just had to tell this
story of this session that I was in basically talking
about media coverage of
climate change.
Her special areas of focus include U.N. policy, U.S. foreign policy and
stories about how other nations are grappling with
climate change.
And news outlets produce the same
stories about the large percentage of Americans who reject evolution or
climate change or believe in UFOs or ghosts.
Among the materials the group sent was a 10 - minute DVD called «Unstoppable Solar Cycles: The Real
Story of Greenland,» which says scientists are «deeply divided»
about «the notion that
climate change is mostly the result of human activities.»
iSeeChange
stories flip the script on traditional top - down
climate change reporting to let people's curiosity — and not just the questions raised by professionals in the field — to tap into the discussion
about climate change impacts.
Seattle, WA
About Blog Find
stories on land use,
climate change, air and water quality, radiation, toxins and other environmental issues.
Layering his
story with grim warnings
about the horrors of
climate change and the co-opting of Christianity by the conservative right, Schrader's movie begins in quiet introspection and ends with a crescendo of political rage.
the next night at Participant Media's Telluride dinner, where he regaled the table with
stories of living large on his world travels as Vice President — before getting serious
about the potential upside of Hurricane Harvey for
climate change.)
Generous funding from the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation supports Sundance Institute's
Climate Change Initiative, which is dedicated to change the way that independent artists, influencers, and the general public think about climate change through the power of
Climate Change Initiative, which is dedicated to change the way that independent artists, influencers, and the general public think about climate change through the power of
Change Initiative, which is dedicated to
change the way that independent artists, influencers, and the general public think about climate change through the power of
change the way that independent artists, influencers, and the general public think
about climate change through the power of
climate change through the power of
change through the power of
story.
Shi» kera Carr and Justin Granados, students from Power U Center for Social
Change, brought tears to the eyes of attendees when sharing their personal
stories about how testing causes anxiety and contributes to an unhealthy school
climate.
But it's a much bigger
story if it starts to be
about climate change, and it starts to be
about the town, and the collateral damage of war.
«With increased awareness
about climate change and almost daily news
stories about extreme weather conditions, consumers want to feed their cats in a way that minimizes their ecological footprint,» she said.
Of course, we also report more pressing
stories about conservation and
climate change, paying attention to the severe outbreak of coral bleaching damaging our planet's reefs — and informing our readers
about the harmful practice of big game hunting.
Over 2,000 students participated in game design courses and game jams, and nearly 400 games were submitted
about three themes:
Climate Change (supported by NOAA), Future Communities (with Current by GE) and Local
Stories & Immigrant Voices (sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities).
And of course, we set up banks of Chromebooks and laptops where students learned how to use Scratch and Gamestar Mechanic to design video games
about the G4C Student Challenge themes (Future Communities,
Climate Change and Local
Stories and Immigrant Voices).
Four mixed - media paintings come from a series Smith began in the early»90s that recalls her father's
stories of older Native Americans who survived colonial violence, while sculptural work framed by a canoe refers to the ongoing debates
about climate change that persist today.
We've been bombarded with horror
stories about the disasterous effects of «Global Warming», «
Climate Change» or whatever it's name is today.
For those of us who think
about climate change often — like unhealthily often — there's sometimes a sense that you're missing the
story.
A Greenpeace video tells the
story of Indonesia's threatened forests New York Times reporter Justin Gillis is out this morning with «With Deaths of Forests, a Loss of Key
Climate Protectors,» a recommended read for anyone concerned about how climate change is affecting the planet and what it means for the present and
Climate Protectors,» a recommended read for anyone concerned
about how
climate change is affecting the planet and what it means for the present and
climate change is affecting the planet and what it means for the present and future.
A
story in The Times of London examines new expressions of concern by scientists
about the perils of overstating the links between extreme events and
climate change.
The perception that you may have of the «debate» in the media or politics is mostly due to the inevitable compression of news
stories, combined with an apparent journalistic need to provide «balance» (see Chris Mooney's article on this), and well - funded campaigns by interests who are worried
about what the reality of
climate change might imply on the regulatory front.
As an example, discussions of «
climate change» have become complicated by confusion about definitions offered by various groups, such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Framework Convention on Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by
climate change» have become complicated by confusion about definitions offered by various groups, such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Framework Convention on Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by R
change» have become complicated by confusion
about definitions offered by various groups, such as the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change and the Framework Convention on Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by
Climate Change and the Framework Convention on Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by R
Change and the Framework Convention on
Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by
Climate Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth» story written by R
Change [link], as emphasized by a previous «Dot Earth»
story written by Revkin.
My first
climate change paper is under review and I am really excited
about the data and the
story.
There is much good in these numbers too, that tell a
story about the freedoms Americans enjoy, but I walked away from my screen convinced we could do much, much better — starting with
climate change of course — and feeling embarassed by America's conduct within the community of nations.
So far the most popular
stories about climate are very conservative; based in the common fear of
change, which is a fair way of describing both all of Crichton's work I have read, and disaster movies like The Day After Tomorrow.
If there was better balance and accuracy in writing
about climate change, even at the cost of a more compelling
story, there would be less easy fodder for the skeptics.
When news broke, whether it was the wreck of the Exxon Valdez or the release of a new report by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, there was a decent chance someone who knew
about oil toxicity or the heat - trapping properties of CO2 would report the
story.