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    51. Preparations and running mock confined field trials

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    52. Conducting Bt cotton controlled release field trials with farmers in Burkina Faso

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    53. Status of biotechnology and biosafety in sub-Saharan Africa

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    55. Growth of agricultural journalism and Agricultural Research Information Centre at ICAR [International Council of Agricultural Research]

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    56. "No one yet knows what the ultimate consequences may be." How Rachel Carson transformed scientific uncertainty into a site for public participation in Silent Spring

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    59. Ignorance or bias? Evaluating the ideological and informational drivers of communication gaps about climate change

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    63. Incorporating information exposure into a theory of planned behavior model to enrich understanding of proenvironmental behavior

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    64. Set it and forget it: the one-way use of social media by government agencies communicating science

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    65. Extending the impacts of hostile media perceptions: influences on discussion and opinion polarization in the context of climate change

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    67. Bridging the research-practice gap in climate communication: lessons from one academic-practitioner collaboration

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    69. Environmental science in the media: effects of opposing viewpoints on risk and uncertainty perceptions

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    70. Speaking of climate change: a discursive analysis of lay understandings

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    71. Putting environmental infographics center stage: the role of visuals at the elaboration likelihood model's critical point of persuasion

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    72. Laughing in the face of climate change? Satire as a device for engaging audiences in public debate

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    73. Climate change in the newsroom: journalists' evolving standards of objectivity when covering global warming

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    75. Inequalities in scientific understanding: differentiating between factual and perceived knowledge gaps

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    77. Seeking information about climate change: effects of media use in an extended PRISM

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    81. Science communication and the rationality of public opinion formation

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    82. Perceived impact of a documentary film: an investigation of the first-person effect and its implications for environmental issues

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    83. Is there a medialization of climate science? Results from a survey of German climate scientists

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    84. Symbolic communication in public protest over genetic modification: visual rhetoric, symbolic excess and social mores

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    86. Constructing climate change in the Americas: an analysis of news coverage in U. S. and South American newspapers

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    87. Whose science do you believe? Explaining trust in sources of scientific information about the environment

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    89. "Everyone may think whatever they like, but scientists..." Or how and to what end plant scientists manage the science-society relationship

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    91. Social stigma and consumer benefits: trade-offs in adoption of genetically modified foods

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    92. Scientific assessments of climate change information in news and entertainment media

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    93. Communicative aspects of the public-science relationship explored: results of focus group discussions about biotechnology and genomics

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    95. Framing emerging technologies: risk perceptions of nanotechnology in the German press

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    96. What science communication scholars think about training scientists to communicate

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    97. Value predispositions, mass media and attitudes toward nanotechnology: the interplay of public and experts

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    98. One or many? The influence of episodic and thematic climate change frames on policy preferences and individual behavior change

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    99. "Science communication" and "agricultural communication(s)"

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