Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Foreword
- List of contributors
- List of tables
- List of figures
- List of text boxes
- Introduction
- Part I Communicating climate change
- 1 Weather or climate change?
- 2 Communicating the risks of global warming: American risk perceptions, affective images, and interpretive communities
- 3 More bad news: the risk of neglecting emotional responses to climate change information
- 4 Public scares: changing the issue culture
- 5 The challenge of trying to make a difference using media messages
- 6 Listening to the audience: San Diego hones its communication strategy by soliciting residents' views
- 7 The climate-justice link: communicating risk with low-income and minority audiences
- 8 Postcards from the (not so) frozen North: talking about climate change in Alaska
- 9 Climate change: a moral issue
- 10 Einstein, Roosevelt, and the atom bomb: lessons learned for scientists communicating climate change
- 11 Across the great divide: supporting scientists as effective messengers in the public sphere
- 12 Dealing with climate change contrarians
- 13 A role for dialogue in communication about climate change
- 14 Information is not enough
- Part II Facilitating social change
- Part III Creating a climate for change
- About the authors
- Index
- References
4 - Public scares: changing the issue culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Foreword
- List of contributors
- List of tables
- List of figures
- List of text boxes
- Introduction
- Part I Communicating climate change
- 1 Weather or climate change?
- 2 Communicating the risks of global warming: American risk perceptions, affective images, and interpretive communities
- 3 More bad news: the risk of neglecting emotional responses to climate change information
- 4 Public scares: changing the issue culture
- 5 The challenge of trying to make a difference using media messages
- 6 Listening to the audience: San Diego hones its communication strategy by soliciting residents' views
- 7 The climate-justice link: communicating risk with low-income and minority audiences
- 8 Postcards from the (not so) frozen North: talking about climate change in Alaska
- 9 Climate change: a moral issue
- 10 Einstein, Roosevelt, and the atom bomb: lessons learned for scientists communicating climate change
- 11 Across the great divide: supporting scientists as effective messengers in the public sphere
- 12 Dealing with climate change contrarians
- 13 A role for dialogue in communication about climate change
- 14 Information is not enough
- Part II Facilitating social change
- Part III Creating a climate for change
- About the authors
- Index
- References
Summary
The communication of urgency about climate change is a central theme of many chapters in this book. But the selling of a social problem is not done in a vacuum and ultimately depends on wider social phenomena such as issue cultures, bridging metaphors, and cultural whirlwinds. For that matter, simple luck in the timing of fortuitous events can be critical. Success cannot be guaranteed for any issue to get on the radar screen of public attention, but these wider social processes provide a landscape for artful activity that can improve the chances of gaining public and media attention.
Issue cultures
Issue cultures can be defined as cognate sets of social problems that become a commanding concern in society. Perhaps the clearest example is anything to do with the security in the United States after the 9/11 terror attacks. Another issue culture has built around the fear of emerging diseases, ranging from Ebola and mad-cow disease though West Nile, SARS, and maybe more recently avian flu. Scientific findings or real-world events related to these problems are immediately selected for coverage by the media and often occasion attention from spokespersons in different public arenas. Social problems that can be linked to and coalesce with extant issue cultures are thus far more likely to attract sustained media and other coverage than problems that are “outliers.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Creating a Climate for ChangeCommunicating Climate Change and Facilitating Social Change, pp. 81 - 88Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
References
- 16
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