Project outputs

Book

Koteyko, N., Nerlich, B. and Hellsten, I. (2017). Climate Change Communication and the Internet: Challenges and Opportunities for Research. London: Routledge.

Special Issue on climate change and communication online

Koteyko, N., Nerlich, B. and I. Hellsten (guest editors). 2015, June. Special issue on: Climate Change Communication & the Internet: Challenges and Opportunities for Research. Environmental Communication: Journal of Nature and Culture.

Articles in print and in press

Porter, A., Kuhn, T. and Nerlich, B. (in press). Organizing authority in the climate change debate: IPCC controversies and the management of dialectical tensions. Organization Studies.

Koteyko, N. and Atanasova, D. (2016). Discourse Analysis Approaches for Assessing Climate Change Communication and Media Representations. In:Oxford Research Encyclopedia, Climate Science (climatescience.oxfordre.com). Oxford University Press US, online first DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.489

Collins, L. and Nerlich, B., 2016. Uncertainty discourses in the context of climate change: A corpus-assisted analysis of UK national newspaper articles Communications: The European Journal of Communication Research. 41(3), 291–313

Hellsten, I. & Leydesdorff, L. (2016). The Construction of Interdisciplinarity: The development of the knowledge base and programmatic focus of the journal Climatic Change, 1977-2013. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 67(9), 2181-2193. doi: 10.1002/asi.23528

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2016). Integrating and Differentiating Meanings in Tweeting about the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report. First Monday 21(9), 5 September 2016.http://dx.doi.org/10.5210/fm.v21i9.6603

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2016). Twitter Campaigns Around the Fifth IPCC Report: Campaign Spreading,Shared Hashtags, and Separate Communities. SAGE Open, July-September, 1-7, DOI: 10.1177/2158244016659117

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2016). Organizational communication on Twitter: Differences between non-profit and for-profit organizations in the context of climate change. in C. M. Schmidt (ed.) Crossmedia-Kommunikation in kulturbedingten Handlungsräumen, Europaische Kulturen in der Wirtschaftskommunikation 25, Springer, UK, pp. 305-313. doi: 10.1007/978-3-658-11076-5_16

Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B. and van Vuuren, K. (2015). Embracing and resisting climate identities in the Australian press: Sceptics, scientists and politics. Public Understanding of Science, online first:

Shaw, C., Hellsten, I., & Nerlich, B. (2016). Framing risk and uncertainty in social science articles on climate change, 1995–2012. In: Communicating Risk (pp. 208-228). Palgrave Macmillan UK.

Schäfer, M., Berglez, P., Wessler, H., Eide, E., Nerlich, B., & O'Neill, S. (2016). Investigating mediated climate change communication: A best-practice guide. https://www.academia.edu/28360824/Schaefer_Berglez_Wessler_Eide_Nerlich_ONeill_2016_._Investigating_Mediated_Climate_Change_Communication_A_Best-Practice_Guide

Collins, L. and Nerlich, B. (2015). How certain is ‘certain’? Exploring how the English-language media reported the use of calibrated language in the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report. Public Understanding of Science, first online.

Atanasova, D. and Koteyko, N. (2015). Metaphors in Guardian Online and Mail Online Opinion-page Content on Climate Change: War, Religion, and Politics. Environmental Communication, first online.

Hellsten, I. and Vasilieadou, E. (2015). The creation of the climategate hype in newspapers and blogs: Mixed methods approach. Internet Research 25(4)

Pearce, W., Brown, B., Nerlich, B., & Koteyko, N. (2015). Communicating climate change: conduits, content, and consensus. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 6(6), 613–626.

Collins, L. (2015). How can semantic annotation help us to analyse the discourse of climatechange in online user comments? Linguistik Online 70(1).

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2015) “Gender differences in the climate change communication on Twitter”, Internet Research, 25(5), pp. 811-828 http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/IntR-07-2014-0179

Shaw, C. and Nerlich, B. (2014) Metaphor as a mechanism of global climate change governance: A study of international policies, 1992–2012. Ecological Economics, 109: 34-40.

Collins L. and Nerlich, B. (2014). Examining user comments for deliberative democracy: a corpus-driven analysis of the climatechange debate online. Environmental Communication. Online First

Holmberg, K. and Hellsten, I. (2014). Analyzing the climate change debate on Twitter – content and differences between genders. Proceedings of the ACM WebScience conference (WebSci'14, June 23–26, 2014, Bloomington, IN, USA.ACM 978-1-4503-2622-3/14/06. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2615569.2615638), pp. 287-288

Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B. and Lemanczyk, S. (2014) Fracking in the Polish Press: Geopolitics and National Identity. Energy Policy 74, 253-251.

Jaspal, R., Turner, A. and Nerlich, B. (2014). Fracking on YouTube: Exploring risks, benefits and human values. Environmental Values 23(5), 501-527.

Pearce, W., Holmberg, K., Hellsten, I. and Nerlich, B. (2014). Climate Change on Twitter: Topics, Communities and Conversations about the 2013 IPCC Working Group 1 Report. PLoS ONE 9(4): e94785. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094785. This paper has been included in a PloS collection which followed a recent paper by James Hansen et al. entitled ‘Responding to climate change’: http://www.ploscollections.org/article/browse/issue/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fissue.pcol.v02.i36

Porter, A. J. and Hellsten, I. (2014). Investigating Participatory Dynamics Through Social Media Using a Multideterminant “Frame” Approach: The Case of Climategate on YouTube. Journal of Computer Mediated Communication, 19(4), 1024–1041.

Nerlich, B. and Hellsten, I. (2014). The greenhouse and the footprint: Climate change risk assessment and risk management seen through the lens of two prominent metaphors. In: Special issue on 'Risikodiskurse/Diskursrisiken - Sprachliche Formierungen von Technologierisiken und ihre Folgen' for the Online Journal Technikfolgenabschätzung - Theorie und Praxis, edited Andreas Lösch (ITAS/KIT) and Marcus Müller (Germanistik/Uni Heidelberg), 23(2), 27-33.

Hellsten, I., Porter, A. and Nerlich, B. (2014). Imagining the future at the global and national scale: A comparative study of British and Dutch Press coverage of Rio 1992 and Rio 2012. Environmental Communication 8(4), 468-488.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2014). Fracking in the UK Press: Threat Dynamics in an Unfolding Debate. Public Understanding of Science 23(3), 348-63. (amongst most read for July in this journal)

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2014). Images of extreme weather: Symbolising human responses to climate change. Science as Culture 23(2), 253-276. (Press released by journal and subsequent press coverage)

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2014). When climate science became climate politics: British media representations of climate change in 1988 . Public Understanding of Science 23 (2),122-141.

Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B. and Cinnirella, M. (2014). Human responses to climate change: social representation, identity and action. Environmental Communication 8 (1), 110-130.

Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B and Koteyko, N. (2013). Contesting science by appealing to its norms: Readers discuss climate science in The Daily Mail. Science Communication 35(3), 383-410.

Koteyko, N., Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2013). Climate change and 'climategate' in online reader comments: A mixed methods study. The Geographical Journal 179(1), 74–86.

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2013). UK Media representations of carbon capture and storage: Actors, frames and metaphors. Metaphor and the Social World 3, 35–53.

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2012). Metaphors we die by? Geoengineering, metaphors and the argument for catastrophe. Metaphor and Symbol, 27(2), 131-47.

Nerlich, Brigitte, Forsyth, Richard, Clarke, David D. (2012). Climate in the news: How differences in media discourse between the US and UK reflect national priorities. Environmental Communication 6(1), 44-53.

Reports

Nerlich, B. and Collins, L. (2013). Written submission to House of Commons Select Committee on Energy and Climate Change IPCC Fifth Assessment Review: ‘How certain is certain? Conveying (un)certainty in the reporting of the 2013 5th IPCC report in English language media.’

O’Hara, S., Humphrey, M., Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B., Knight, W. Public perceptions of shale gas extraction in the UK: The impact of the Balcombe protests in July-August 2013. October 2013. http://nottspolitics.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/public-perceptions-of-shale-gas-in-the-UK-september-2013-1-2.pdf.

O’Hara, S., Humphrey, M., Andersson, J., Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B., Knight, W. Public perceptions of shale gas in the UK: The turn against fracking deepens. January 2014. http://www.scribd.com/doc/131787519/public-perceptions-of-shale-gas-in-the-UK-January-2014-pdf.

End of award conference

Hellsten, I. and Nerlich, B. (conference organisers) (2014). End of award conference: Changing climate change communication, Amsterdam, 21-22 July, 2014: https://sites.google.com/site/climatechangeoraproject/conference-2014

Conference papers

Hellsten, I. (2016) “The Construction of interdisciplinarity”, seminar for the Science, Business and Innovation group at the VU Amsterdam, 26 January, 2016.

Hellsten, I. (2016) “Methodological Puzzles: From Content and Structure to Socio-Semantic Networks”, invited presentation at St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia, 15 January 2016 (invited by director, Dr. Basov)

Hellsten, I. (2015) “Twitter and Climate Change: Theoretical and Methodological Avenues” invited presentation at the University of Amsterdam, Dept. of Media Studies, Amsterdam, 18 February 2015 (invited by Prof. Richard Rogers)

Hellsten, I. (2015) “Network Methods: Scientometrics and semantic networks” presentation at the PhD seminar on University Business Collaboration and Dynamics, VU University Amsterdam, 22 April, 2015

Hellsten, I. (2014) “Social media and climate change” invited presentation at the University of Bergen, Department of Information Sciences and Media Studies, Norway, 20 November 2014 (invited by Prof. Dag Elgesem)

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2015). Fracking in cultural consciousness. STEaPP, UCL, London, 27 May, 2015

Koteyko, N. (2014). Corpus-assisted analysis of ‘user generated content’ on climate change. Invited panel ‘Uses of corpora in the study of social issues’, BAAL. Warwick, 6 September, 2014.

Atanasova, D. and Koteyko, N. (2014). War and religion in Guardian Online and Mail Online editorials on climate change. 10th Conference of the Association for Researching and Applying Metaphor METAPHOR IN COMMUNICATION, SCIENCE AND EDUCATION, Cagliari, June 22, 2014.

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2014). Twitter and campaign spreading around the 5th IPCC report. To appear in the Proceedings of the Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space -conference, June 18-20, 2014, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Refereed abstract]

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2014). Analyzing the climate change debate on Twitter – content and differences between genders. ACM Web Science Conference (WebSci’14) Indiana University, Bloomington, 23-26 June.To appear in the Proceedings of WebSci2014, 23-26 June, 2014, Bloomington, IN. [Refereed poster/abstract]

Hellsten, I. & Holmberg, K. (2014). Combining network structures and meanings: Tweeting over IPCC report. Sunbelt conference, 18-23 February, 2014, St Petersburg, Florida, USA. [Refereed abstract]

Hellsten, I. & Leydesdorff, L. (2014) “The construction of interdisciplinarity: Climatic Change – journal, 1977-2013”. Paper presented in the ORA-end conference “Changing climate change communication: A conference on the interactions between culture, society and language in the context of global warming, Amsterdam, July 2014 (funded by the NWO)

Holmberg, K. & Hellsten, I. (2014) “Organizational communication on Twitter – Differences between non-profit and for-profit organizations in the context of climate change”, EUCO conference, Turku. Finland October 2014

Nerlich, B. (2014). Talk about war and peace, climate change and geoengineering for: War and Peace in the Life of Language International Linguistics Symposium, 25-26 April, University of Nottingham. https://ti-ling.com/article/63

Nerlich, B. (2014). Fracking in the UK: Between promise and peril. Invited paper for conference organised by the Geological Society on ‘Communicating Contested Geosciences’, London, 20 June: http://www.aig.org.au/events/communicating-contested-geoscience-new-strategies-for-public-engagement/

Nerlich, B. (2014). The politics of metaphor in the context of climate change. Invited paper for: The Political Impact of Metaphors, University of Liege, Belgium, 15-16 May: http://www.bu.edu/applied-linguistics/2014/04/09/confs-cognitive-science-discourse-analysisbelgium/

Nerlich, B. (2014). Invited seminar on 'Climate Change: Science, Politics, and Metaphors' for Centre for the Study of Political Ideologies (CSPI), School of Politics, University of Nottingham, 25 February.

Koteyko, N. (2013). (2013). Studying social and linguistic representations of climate change in online spaces: the case of reader comments. Individual and collective representations of climate change: Interdisciplinary perspectives. Workshop organized by the Paris Research Consortium Climate-Environment-Society. Paris, 8th March.

Koteyko, N. (2013). Corpus-assisted analysis of internet-based discourses: From patterns to rhetoric description. Invited talk at the Department of Communication, Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel, 24 January.

Collins, L. (2013). Exploring ‘heteroglossic engagement’ in the climate change debate. Influencing Policy on Climate Change: An interdisciplinary workshop for early career researchers, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor, 1 October.

Nerlich, B. (2013). The Human Face of Fracking: A Thematic Analysis of Fifty YouTube Videos. Keynote for: Climate Change Communication and the Internet: Challenges and Opportunities for Research Conference, University of Leicester, 12th April 2013.

Jaspal, R. (2013). Climate science or climate politics? A critical discourse analysis of online reader comments on climate change. Climate Change Communication and the Internet: Challenges and Opportunities for Research Conference, University of Leicester, 12th April 2013.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2013). Media representations of geoengineering: Constructing hopes and fears through metaphor use. Paper presented at the Science in Public Conference, University of Nottingham, UK, 22-23 July 2013.

Porter, A.J (2013). Authoritative texts as boundary devices: The case of the climate change debate in the Netherlands. European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS) conference, Subtheme: Organizations as Precarious Accomplishments, Montreal.

Porter, A.J. (2013). “Exploring Interorganizational Tension and Failure: The Case of Problem-centered Responses to Climate Change in the Netherlands.” EGOS, European Group for Organization Studies conference in Montreal, Canada, 5-7 July 2013.

Porter, A.J. (2012). A ‘Disorganization’ Approach to Theorizing the Communicative Constitution of Organizations. EGOS, European Group for Organization Studies conference in Helsinki, Finland, 3-5 July 2012.

Hellsten, I. (2012). Social avalanches as moments of drastic reorganization of meanings, EGOS, European Organization Sciences conference in Helsinki, Finland, 3-5 July 2012.

Hellsten, I. and Vasilieadou, E. (2012). Climategate hype in newspapers and blogs, ECREA 2012 - 4th European Communication Conference Istanbul Bilgi University Istanbul, Turkey, 24-27 October 2012.

Hellsten, I. (2012). Methodological gaps and missing tools: Social Sciences meet Computer Sciences. Invited presentation at the KNAW e-Humanities group, 4 October, 2012.

Hellsten, I. (2011). From greenhouse effect to climategate: A systematic study of climate change as a complex social issue EPA speaker series, Institute for Environmental Studies IVM, VU, 10 November 2011.

Nerlich, B. (2013). Invited participant, Workshop on International Analyses of Climate Change Communication, Hamburg, KlimaKampus, 18-20 April, 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013). Invited participant and chair, Climate Geoengineering Governance (CGG) Project Opening Workshop – Oxford, 18-19 March 2013

Nerlich, B. (2013). Invited paper ("Coming to terms with climate change through metaphors") for the international conference "Risk Discourses, Discourse Risks: European Perspectives on the Linguistic Depiction of Technological Risks" organised by the research network 'language and knowledge' (http://www.suw.uni-hd.de) and the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (http://www.itas.kit.edu/), 9th to 11th of September 2013 at the International Science Forum Heidelberg (IWH)

Nerlich. B. (2013). Invited participant, Workshop on The Politics of Geoengineering, Open University in London (Camden), 7 May.

Koteyko, N. (2012). Studying social media discourses on climate change: challenges and opportunities. ECREA conference, Istanbul, Turkey. 26 October.

Koteyko, N. R Jaspal, and B. Nerlich (2012) Online reader comments on climate change: A corpus-assisted study of climate sceptic discourses. ECREA pre-conference "Communicating Climate Change III - The Audience Perspectives", Istanbul, Turkey. 23 October.

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2013). Fracking in traditional and social media. Departmental Seminar, Department of Sociology, University of Warwick. 16 January 2013.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2012). Climate change: integrating the intrapsychic, cultural and political dimensions. Paper presented at the Culture, Politics and Climate Change Conference, University of Colorado-Boulder, USA, 13th-15th September 2012.

Hellsten, I., Nerlich, B. and Porter, A. (2012). Paper presented at the Culture, Politics and Climate Change Conference, University of Colorado-Boulder, USA, 13th-15th September 2012.

Koteyko, N. and Jaspal, R. (2012). Online discourses on science and scientists after ‘climategate’: A mixed-method analysis of readers’ comments. MeCCSA Annual Conference, University of Bedfordshire, 11th-13th January.

Nerlich, B. (2012). Metaphors of geoengineering: How are geoengineering technologies portrayed in the mass media? Invited paper presented at the symposium entitled Frames of Geoengineering: Averting catastrophe or heading for disaster? Free University of Amsterdam, 12 October 2012.

Hellsten, I. and Vasileiadou , E. (2012) Climategate and the creation of hypes: How do newspapers and blogs influence each other? Paper for: The Co-Production of Knowledge: Social Media, STS and ..., University of York, 18 July 2012.

Jaspal, R., Nerlich, B. and Koteyko, N. (2012). Resisting social representations of climate change in online reader comments. Paper presented at the Science in Public Conference, University College London, 20th-21st July 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012). Uncertainty in ordinary language – exploring some patterns of use. Paper presented at the AHRC funded workshop ‘Representing and Communicating Uncertainty: Climate Change and Risk’ conference, PI Sarah Metcalfe, Co-Is Brigitte Nerlich, Colin Thorne, Andrew Cliffe, Georgina Endfield, Simon Gosling, Neil Crout, University of Nottingham, 12 April, 2012.

Nerlich Brigitte and Jaspal, Rusi (2012). Media coverage of Carbon Capture and Storage in the UK. Paper presented at the HERMES fellowship funded workshop organised within the framework of the NCCCS: ‘ Public Engagement with CCS: A Different Perspective’, University of Nottingham, 21 May, 2012.

Jaspal, R. (2012). Media representations of climate change. Paper presented at the Discourse, Communication and Conversation Conference, University of Loughborough, 21st-23rd March 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012). Workshop presentation “Uncertainty in ordinary language: Exploring patterns of use”. AHRC workshop on ‘Representing and communicating uncertainty: climate change and risk’ (AHRC, Science in Culture Exploratory Award, led by Professor Sarah Metcalfe), Sir Clive Granger Building, University of Nottingham, 12 April 2012.

Nerlich, B. and Jaspal, R. (2012). Workshop presentation: “Carbon Capture and Storage in the UK media; recent developments” for: Public Engagement with CCS: A Different Perspective. A One Day Stakeholder Workshop, Monday 21st May 2012 at the Sir Colin Campbell Building, The University of Nottingham Innovation Park, organised by Dr Sarah Mackintosh and Professor Brigitte Nerlich for the Nottingham Centre for Carbon Capture and Storage.

Riese, J. and Porter, A. (2012). A Meso Level Framework for the Empirical Study of Organizational Responses to Complex Social Problems: The Case of Climate Change Communication in the Netherlands. 10th International Conference on Discourse and Organization, Free University Amsterdam, 18-20 July 2012

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2012). Human responses to climate change: social representation, identity and social action. Paper presented at the "Methodological and conceptual approaches for researching climate change at different societal scales" British Sociological Association Climate Change Study Group Event, University of Southampton, 30-31st March 2012.

Koteyko, N., Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2012). A mixed methods approach to analysing online reader comments on newspaper articles concerning climate change. Paper presented at the "Methodological and conceptual approaches for researching climate change at different societal scales" British Sociological Association Climate Change Study Group Event, University of Southampton, 30-31st March 2012.

Porter, A.J. and Hellsten, I. (2011). Climategate in YouTube: Antagonism and polarization in climate change activism. The Social Media for Social Purposes Conference, Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmark, 31st October – 1st November 2011.

Koteyko, N. and Jaspal, R. (2011). Corpus-assisted analysis of social media discourses on climate change. Paper presented at the Media, Communication and Cultural Studies in UK Higher Education Annual Conference, University of Bedfordshire, 11th-13th January 2012.

Koteyko, N. (2011). A linguistic enquiry into online discourses on climate change mitigation. University of Bergen, Norway, Institutt for fremmedspråk/Department of Foreign Languages, 20-21, October, 2011.

Jaspal, R. (2011). Climate change: social representation, identity and social action. Paper presented at the Science and Technology Studies Seminar Series, Institute for Science and Society, University of Nottingham, 23rd November 2011.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2011). Social representations of climate change in the 1988 British broadsheet Press. Paper presented at the Cultural Spaces of Climate Early Career Researcher Network, Royal Geographical Society, 6th - 7th October 2011.

Nerlich, B. (2011). Geoengineering: Verbal and visual images of promotion and protest. Symposium: Visualising Science and Environment, University of Brighton, 17-18 November, 2011.

Nerlich, B. (2011). Metaphors we die by? Geoengineering, metaphors, and the argument from catastrophe. Paper presented at the International Symposium Limits to the Anthropocene: What are the boundaries of human intervention into nature, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany, 22-24 September 2011.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2011). Social representations of climate change in the 1988 British broadsheet. Poster presented at BPS Social Psychology Section Annual Conference, Fitzwilliam College, University of Cambridge, 6th-8th September 2011.

Hellsten, I. (2011). Climategate Hype: Cross-system and cross-network analysis?, Sunbelt XXXI, International Sunbelt Social Network, Conference, TradeWinds Island Resorts, St. Pete Beach, FL, February 8 - 13, 2011

Jaspal, R. (2011). 1988 - When climate change entered the political arena: A social representations analysis of British broadsheet coverage, 9 June, 2011, Poster for launch of STS Priority Group event, University of Nottingham (received second prize in poster competition).

Other

Nerlich, B. and Collins, L. (2013). Submission to the House of Commons Select Committee Inquiry into the IPCC 5th assessment report.

Jaspal, R. and Nerlich, B. (2013). Geogenineering and (un)making the world we want to live in. Geolog: The Official Blog of the European Geoscienes Union.

Nerlich, B., Low carbon futures: Promises and Problems, 23 June, 2011, Greenpeace, NottinghamResearch reports

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201415/cmselect/cmenergy/587/587.pdf

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201415/cmselect/cmenergy/587/58707.htm

The 'Climate Change on Twitter' paper was mentioned on Sky News, in an interview with Dr. Tamsin Edwards (Bristol). The paper shows how the nature of Twitter interactions differed in the UK from the US/Australia. The interview can be found here, begins at 16:45 http://news.sky.com/story/1299792/digital-view-news-for-plugged-in-generation

Blogs

More here

Nerlich, B. (2012). Languages of uncertainty http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/04/04/languages-of-uncertainty/

Collins, L. (2013). Do online user comments provide a space for deliberative democracy? https://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/10/11/do-online-user-comments-provide-a-space-for-deliberative-democracy/

Nerlich, B. (2014). Climate fiction: The anticipation and exploration of plausible futures. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/07/27/climate-fiction-the-anticipation-and-exploration-of-plausible-futures/

Nerlich, B. (2012) Waiting for gate-gate. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/02/22/waiting-for-gate-gate/. Posted 22nd February 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Weather or climate? Enjoy or worry? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/02/27/weather-or-climate/. Posted 27th February 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Climategate, media volume and public concerns – what’s the relation? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/03/02/climategate-media-volume-and-public-concerns/. Posted 2nd March 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Climate communication conundrums. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/03/14/climate-communication-conundrums/. Posted 14th March 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Carbon energy/publics and politics. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/05/20/carbon-and-energy/. Posted 20th may 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Rio plus 20 minus hope. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/06/26/rio-plus-20-minus-hope/. Posted 26th June 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Unseasonable weather; unseasonable climate? Facts, fictions and fantasies. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/07/15/unseasonable-weather-unseasonable-climate/. Posted 15th July 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) From Katrina to Sandy: Searching online for links to climate change. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/11/16/from-katrina-to-sandy-searching-online-for-links-to-climate-change/. Posted 16th November 2012.

Jaspal, R. (2012) The Threat of Fracking: Real or Constructed? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/12/14/the-threat-of-fracking-real-or-constructed/. Posted 14th December 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2012) Abseiling down the climate cliff metaphor. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2012/12/17/abseiling-down-the-climate-cliff-metaphor-2/. Posted 17th December 2012.

Nerlich, B. (2013) Extreme weather events, climate change and the media. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/01/30/extreme-weather-events/. Posted 30th January 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013) Moderation impossible? Climate change, alarmism and rhetorical entrenchment. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/02/27/moderation-impossible-climate-change-alarmism-and-rhetorical-entrenchment/. Posted 27th February 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013) Public understanding of climate change: The deficit fallacy. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/04/07/public-understanding-of-climate-change/. Posted 7th April 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013) Mitigation, adaptation, geoengineering: Patterns of discourse, patterns of mystery. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/06/05/mitigation-adaptation-geoengineering-patterns-of-discourse-patterns-of-mystery/. Posted 5th June 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013) Extreme weather talk: Making climate public? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/06/19/extreme-weather-talk-making-climate-public/. Posted 19th June 2013.

Jaspal, R. & Nerlich, B. (2013). Geoengineering and the (un)making of the world we want to live in. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/07/31/geoengineering-and-the-unmaking-of-the-world-we-want-to-live-in/. Posted 31st July 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2013). Consensus on climate change: Tracing the contours of a debate. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/08/23/consensus-on-climate-change-tracing-the-contours-of-a-debate/. Posted 23rd August 2013.

Collins, L. (2013). Do online user comments provide a space for deliberative democracy? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2013/10/11/do-online-user-comments-provide-a-space-for-deliberative-democracy/. Posted 11th October 2013.

Nerlich, B. (2014). Certainty. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/01/06/certainty/. Posted 6th January 2014.

Nerlich, B., Pearce, W. and Hulme, M. (2014). Global warming is dead, long live global heating? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/02/04/global-heating/. Posted 4th February 2014.

Nerlich, B. (2014). Making weather personal. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/03/03/making-weather-personal/. Posted 3rd March 2014.

Nerlich, B. (2014). Adaptation. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/04/07/adaptation/. Posted 7th April 2014.

Pearce, W. (2014). Climate change on Twitter 2013: who tweeted what about the IPCC? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/04/09/climate-change-on-twitter-2013-who-tweeted-what-about-the-ipcc/. Posted 9th April 2014.

Nerlich, B. (2014). Climate realism: what does it mean? http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/04/13/climate-realism-what-does-it-mean/. Posted 13th April 2014.

Nerlich, B. (2014). Tracking fluctuations in climate change debates. http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/makingsciencepublic/2014/04/22/tracking-fluctuations-in-climate-change-debates/. Posted 22nd April 2014.

Jaspal, R. (2014). Fracking will be tried in the court of public opinion in 2015. http://theconversation.com/fracking-will-be-tried-in-the-court-of-public-opinion-in-2015-26780. Posted 19th May 2014.

Porter, Amanda (December 18, 2012) “The role of objects in CCO: Rennstam on “Object control””, at: http://orgcom.wordpress.com/2012/12/18/the-role-of-objects-in-cco-rennstam-on-object-control/

Porter, Amanda (June 7, 2013) “Communication events”, at http://orgcom.wordpress.com/2013/06/07/communication-events/

Press Releases

“Twitter vital to understanding public debate on climate change”. VU University Amsterdam. http://www.vu.nl/en/news-agenda/news/2014/apr-jun/Twitter-vital-to-understanding-public-debate-on-climate-change.asp. 10th April 2014.

“Communicating #climatechange on Twitter”. University of Nottingham. http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/news/pressreleases/2014/april/communicating-climatechange-on-twitter.aspx. 9th April 2014.

Some press coverage

Eaves dropping on the climate change debate - ESRC press release

Press release related to extreme images paper

Articles based on press release

http://www.ibtimes.com/do-extreme-weather-images-affect-climate-change-effort-photos-make-viewers-apathetic-report-says

http://environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/article/yournews/56470

http://haccpeuropa.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/extreme-weather-images-cause-disengagement-with-climate-change/

http://joannenova.com.au/2014/02/whats-an-alarmist-to-do-extreme-weather-images-lead-to-denial-like-everything-else-does/

www.eenews.net/stories/1059994756

http://carbon-based-ghg.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/extreme-weather-images-in-media-cause.html

http://www.haccpeuropa.com/2014/02/19/extreme-weather-images-cause-disengagement-with-climate-change/

www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/02/140218100626.htm

Article based on a related interview

http://www.eenews.net/climatewire/stories/1059994756

Brigitte's views on Jules Verne included in this list of 25 inspirational texts on climate change assembled by Carbon Brief

New Scientist Opinion article based on article by Atanasova and Koteyko on war and religion metaphors - also covered in French here