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    4. Can science writing collectives overcome barriers to more democratic communication and collaboration? Lessons from environmental communication praxis in southern Appalachia

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    5. Ken Burns' the national parks: America's best idea (2009): missed opportunities for environmental messages

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    6. Overcoming environmental challenges by antagonizing environmental protesters: the Turkish government discourse against anti-hydroelectric power plants movements

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    7. Environmental communication: why this crisis discipline should facilitate environmental democracy

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    8. Environmental risks in newspaper coverage: a framing analysis of investigative reports on environmental problems in 10 Chinese newspapers

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    9. Places and people: rhetorical constructions of “community” in a Canadian environmental risk assessment

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    11. Overcoming barriers to successful environmental advocacy campaigns in the organizational context

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    13. Cultural discourses of dwelling: investigating environmental communication as a place-based practice

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    15. How grammatical choice shapes media representations of climate (un)certainty

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    16. The nature of time: How the covers of the world's most widely read weekly news magazine visualize environmental affairs

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    17. Environmental discourses and discourse coalitions in the reconfiguration of Peru's environmental governance

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    19. Making progress? Reproducing hegemony through discourses of “sustainable development” in the Australian news media

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    20. “Hey friend, buy green”: Social media use to influence eco-purchasing involvement

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    21. The impact of global NGOs on Japanese press coverage of climate negotiations: An analysis of the new “background media strategy”

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    22. Exploring environmentalism amidst the clamor of networks: a social network analysis of Utah environmental organizations

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    23. Media use and public perceptions of global warming in India

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    24. Sources and framing of fracking: a content analysis of newspaper coverage in North Carolina, New York, and Pennsylvania

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    25. Media access and political efficacy in the eco-politics of climate change: Canadian national news and mediated policy networks

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    26. From narrative of promise to rhetoric of sustainability: a genealogy of oil sands

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    27. Risk and responsibility in public engagement by climate scientists: Reconsidering advocacy during the Trump era

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    28. Why it matters how we frame the environment

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    29. Best practices in environmental communication: a case study of Louisiana's coastal crisis

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    30. In Flanders Fields: de/politicization and democratic debate on a GM potato field trial controversy in news media

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    31. Overcoming endpoint bias in climate change communication: the case of Arctic Sea ice trends

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    32. Dividing and uniting through naming: the case of North Carolina's sea-level-rise policy

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    33. Discourses of place: environmental interpretation about Vermont forests

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    34. It's a matter of trust: American judgments of the credibility of informal communicators on solutions to climate change

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    35. The representation of biofuels in political cartoons: ironies, contradictions and moral dilemmas

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    36. The 2014 walrus haul out: A case study of selective exposure to environmental news coverage

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    37. Climate change reporting in Great Lakes Region newspapers: a comparative study of the use of expert sources

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    38. Communication practices and political engagement with climate change: a research agenda

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    39. Spectacular environmentalisms: media, knowledge and the framing of ecological politics

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    40. Belligerent broadcasting, male anti-authoritarianism and anti-environmentalism: the case of Top Gear (BBC, 2002–2015)

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    41. Graphs of grief and other green feelings: the uses of affect in the study of environmental communication

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    42. Beyond the money shot; or how framing nature matters? Locating Green at Wildscreen

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    43. Hello from the other side: popular culture, crisis, and climate activism

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    45. Portraying the perils to polar bears: the role of empathic and objective perspective-taking toward animals in climate change communication

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    46. Image themes and frames in US print news stories about climate change

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    47. Forum: organizing and integrating knowledge about environmental communication

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    48. Reflections on environmental communication and the challenges of a new research agenda

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    49. Promising directions for environmental communication research

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    50. Making environmental communication work: creating useful guidance

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    51. Climate change communication and the internet: challenges and opportunities for research

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    52. Meeting the climate change challenge (MC3): the role of the internet in climate change research dissemination and knowledge mobilization

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    53. Framing global warming: is that really the question? A realist, Gramscian critique of the framing paradigm in media and communication research

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    54. The relative effect of message-based appeals to promote water conservation at a tourist resort in the gulf of Thailand

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    55. “I drink it anyway and I know I shouldn't”: understanding green consumers' positive evaluations of norm-violating non-green products and misleading green advertising

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    56. Climate refugees or migrants? Contesting media frames on climate justice in the Pacific

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    57. Applying the theory of planned behavior and media dependency theory: Predictors of public pro-environmental behavioral intentions in Singapore

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    58. Visual climate change communication: from iconography to locally framed 3D visualization

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    59. Media frames and cognitive accessibility: What do “global warming” and “climate change” evoke in partisan minds?

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    60. The voice of science on climate change in the mainstream Turkish press

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    61. Media representations of climate change: a meta-analysis of the research field

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    62. Constructions of climate change on the radio and in Nepalese lay focus groups

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    63. Integrating media studies of climate change into transdisciplinary research: which direction should we be heading?

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    64. Media context and reporting opportunities on climate change: 2012 versus 1988

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    65. Media and climate change: Four long-standing research challenges revisited

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    66. Media research on climate change: where have we been and where are we heading?

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    67. Rhetorical framing in corporate press releases: the case of British petroleum and the Gulf oil spill

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    68. Chemical controversy: Canadian and US news coverage of the scientific debate about bisphenol A

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    69. Negotiating virtue and vice: articulations of lay conceptions of health and sustainability in social media conversations around natural beverages

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    70. The influence of media use on environmental engagement: a political socialization approach

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    71. Human responses to climate change: social representation, identity and socio-psychological action

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    72. Strategic framing of climate change by industry actors: a meta-analysis

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    73. The ecology of empire: Wal-Mart's rhetoric of environmental stewardship and the constitutive power of the multitude

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    74. Spreading the news on carbon capture and storage: A state-level comparison of US media

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    75. Mountaintop removal as a case study: the possibilities for public advocacy through virtual toxic tours

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    76. Researching visual environmental communication

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    77. "Single-minded, compelling, and unique”: visual communications, landscape, and the calculated aesthetic of place branding

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    78. Sporting nature(s): wildness, the primitive, and naturalizing imagery in MMA and sports advertisements

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    79. Changing the conversation about climate change: a theoretical framework for place-based climate change engagement

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    80. Belonging to the rainbow region: place, local media, and the construction of civil and moral identities strategic to climate change adaptability

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    81. The enrollment of nature in tourist information: framing urban nature as “the other”

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    82. It's not easy being green … or is it? A content analysis of environmental claims in magazine advertisements from the United States and United Kingdom

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    83. It's easy being green: the effects of argument and imagery on consumer responses to green product packaging

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    84. Greenwashing consumption: the didactic framing of ExxonMobil's energy solutions

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    85. “Fox tots attack shock”: urban foxes, mass media and boundary-breaching

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    86. “Looking both ways”: Metaphor and the rhetorical alignment of intersectional climate justice and reproductive justice concerns

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    87. The global in the local: A case study on deforestation in a Ukrainian journalistic field

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    90. Creating a place for environmental communication research in sustainability science

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    92. Taking the romance out of extraction: contemporary Canadian artists and the subversion of the romantic/extractive gaze

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    93. Climate change discourses and citizen participation: a case study of the discursive construction of citizenship in two public events

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    94. No longer “bullying the rhine:” giving narrative a place in flood management

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    99. Memories of the tropics in industrial jungles: Constructing nature, contesting nature

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