Page 53 - Sustainability Communication Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Theoritical Foundations
P. 53

36                                          M. Adomßent and J. Godemann


            BMU – Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (Ed.)
              (2009). Environmental awareness and sustainable consumption. Retrieved July 30, 2010, from
              www.umweltbundesamt.de/umweltbewusstsein-e/umweltbewusstsein.htm.
            Coenen, F., Huitema, D., & O’Toole, L. J., Jr. (Eds.). (1998). Participation and the quality of
              environmental decision making (Environment & Policy, Vol. 14). New York: Academic.
            Cox, R. (2007). Nature’s “crisis disciplines”: Does environmental communication have an ethical
              duty? Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture, 1(1), 5–20.
            Cox, R. (2010). Environmental communication and the public sphere (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks: Sage.
            Defra (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) (2008). A framework for pro-environmental
              behaviours. Report. London.
            Depoe, S. P., Delicath, J., & Aepli Elsenbeer, M. (Eds.). (2004). Communication and public par-
              ticipation in environmental decision making. New York: State University of New York Press.
            Doulton, H., & Brown, K. (2009). Ten years to prevent catastrophe? Discourses of climate change
              and international development in the UK press. Global Environmental Change, 19, 191–202.
            Ereaut, G. & Segnit, N. (2006). Warm words. How are we telling the climate story and can we tell
              it better? (Institute for Public Policy Research) Retrieved July, 30, 2010, from www.ippr.org/
              publicationsandreports.
            Fischhoff, B. (2007). Nonpersuasive communication about matters of greatest urgency: Climate
              change. Environmental Science & Technology, 41(21), 7204–7208.
            Felt, U. (2002). Bildung durch Wissenschaft. DIE – Zeitschrift für Erwachsenenbildung, 9(2),
              22–25.
            Göpfert,  W.,  &  Peters,  P.  (1996).  Wissenschaftler  und  Journalisten  –  ein  spannungsreiches
              Verhältnis. In W. Göpfert & S. Ruß-Mohl (Eds.), Wissenschaftsjournalismus: Ein Handbuch
              für Ausbildung und Praxis (3rd ed., pp. 21–27). Berlin: Econ.
            Grunwald, A. (2004). Die gesellschaftliche Wahrnehmung von Nachhaltigkeitsproblemen und die
              Rolle der Wissenschaften. In D. Ipsen & J. C. Schmidt (Eds.), Dynamiken der Nachhaltigkeit
              (pp. 313–341). Marburg: Metropolis.
            Hajer, M. A. (1995). The politics of environmental discourse: Ecological modernization and the
              policy process. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
            Harriss, R. (2008). An ongoing dialogue on climate change: The Boulder Manifesto. In S. C.
              Moser & L. Dilling (Eds.), Creating a climate for change: Communicating climate change and
              facilitating social change (pp. 485–490). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
            Japp, K., & Kusche, I. (2008). Systems theory and risk. In J. O. Zinn (Ed.), Social theories of risk
              and uncertainty: An introduction (pp. 76–105). Malden: Wiley Blackwell.
            Juntti, M., Russel, D., & Turnpenny, J. (2009). Evidence, politics and power in public policy for
              the environment. Environmental Science & Policy, 12, 207–215.
            Kloprogge, P., van der Sluijs, J. P., & Wardekker, J. A. (2007). Uncertainty communication: Issues
              and good practice. Utrecht: Copernicus Institute for Sustainable Development and Innovation,
              Utrecht University.
            Lorenzoni, I., & Hulme, M. (2009). Believing is seeing: Laypeople’s views of future socio-economic
              and climate change in England and in Italy. Public Understanding of Science, 18, 383–400.
            Lundgren, R. E., & McMakin, A. H. (2009). Risk communication: A handbook for communicating
              environmental, safety, and health risks (4th ed.). Hoboken: Wiley.
            Maasen, S. (2009). Converging technologies – Diverging reflexivities? Intellectual work in knowledge-risk-
              media-audit societies. In M. Kaiser, M. Monika Kurath, & S. Maasen (Eds.), Governing future
              technologies, sociology of the sciences (Yearbook, Vol. 27). Dordrecht: Springer.
            Maasen, S., & Weingart, P. (Eds.). (2005). Democratization of expertise? Exploring novel forms of
              scientific advice in political decision-making (Sociology of the Sciences, Vol. 24). Dordrecht:
              Springer.
            Maibach, E., & Hornig Priest, S. (2009). No more “business as usual” addressing climate change
              through constructive engagement. Science Communication, 30(3), 299–304.
            McDonald, S. (2009). Changing climate, changing minds: Applying the literature on media effects,
              public  opinion,  and  the  issue-attention  cycle  to  increase  public  understanding  of  climate
              change. International Journal of Sustainability Communication, 4, 45–63.
   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58