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E-raamat: Communicating Climate Change: Making Environmental Messaging Accessible

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This edited collection focuses on theoretical and applied research-based observations concerning how experts, advocates, and institutions make climate change information accessible to different audiences.

Communicating Climate Change concentrates on three key elements of climate change communication access, relevance, and understandability to provide an overview of how these aspects allow multiple groups of stakeholders to act on climate-related information to build resilience. Featuring contributions from a wide range of scholars from across different disciplines, this book explores a multitude of different scenarios and communication methods, including social media; public opinion surveys; participatory mapping; and video. Overall, climate change communication is addressed from three different perspectives: communicating with the public; communicating for stakeholder engagement; and organizational, institutional, risk, and disaster communication.

With each chapter focusing on implications and applications for practice, this book will be of great interest to students and researchers of climate change and environmental communication, as well as practitioners interested in understanding how to better engage stakeholders through climate change-related communication.
List of figures
x
List of tables
xii
List of contributors
xiii
1 Introduction: The challenges of communicating about climate change in the modern era
1(12)
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
Burton St. John
PART 1 Communicating with the public
13(64)
2 Asking questions for adaptation: Using public and stakeholder surveys as a tool within coastal climate change policy processes
15(21)
Karen L. Akerlof
Kristin Timm
Syma A. Ebbin
Jill M. Gambill
Phyllis M. Grifman
Tancred Miller
Susanne Moser
3 Engaging residents in policy and planning for sea-level rise: Application of the Action-oriented Stakeholder Engagement for a Resilient Tomorrow (ASERT) framework
36(22)
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
J. Gail Nicula
Daniel P. Richards
Ogechukwu Agim
Michelle Covi
Khairul A. Anuar
4 Communicating within immersion and presence: The use of 360-degree video to make climate change touchable
58(19)
Andreas Hebbel-Seeger
Christian Rudeloff
Riccardo Wagner
Sebastian Pranz
PART 2 Communicating for stakeholder engagement
77(56)
5 Communicating and co-producing information with stakeholders: Examples of participatory mapping approaches related to sea-level rise risks and impacts
79(18)
Pragati Rawat
Khairul A. Anuar
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
Jon Derek Loftis
Ren-Neasha Blake
6 Social media and climate change dialogue: A review of the research and guidance for science communicators
97(19)
Brooke Fisher Liu
Jiyoun Kim
7 Key elements of user preferences for flood alerts and implications for the design and development of flood alert or warning systems
116(17)
Donta Council
Tihara Richardson
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
PART 3 Organizational, institutional, risk, and disaster communication
133(70)
8 The Standing Rock Water Protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline: Addressing environmental degradation through Indigenous political ecology as the "trickster science"
135(16)
Danielle Quichocho
Burton St. John
9 Risk communication in the tourism industry
151(18)
Lindsay E. Usher
Ashley Schroeder
10 Risk management and biases in how drivers respond to nuisance flooding
169(16)
Saige Hill
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
Burton St. John
Pragati Rawat
Carol Considine
11 Rethinking disaster communication ecology: Exploring context in isolated communities in the Philippines
185(18)
Dennis John F. Sumaylo
Marianne D. Sison
PART 4 Conclusion
203(6)
12 Toward accessible messaging and effective climate change communication
205(4)
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf
Burton St. John
Index 209
Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf is a professor of public service in the Strome College of Business, Old Dominion University (ODU), USA and Assistant Director of the ODU Institute for Coastal Adaptation and Resilience.

Burton St. John III is a professor of public relations and associate chair of the Advertising, Public Relations, and Media Design Department at the University of ColoradoBoulder, USA.