Category: Climate Change

  • Abseiling down the climate cliff metaphor

    Abseiling down the climate cliff metaphor

    Since its very beginning in the 1980s, public discourse about climate change has been structured by metaphors. We had the greenhouse effect, the carbon footprint, the hockey stick, the tipping point, and we also had climategate; and to these metaphors we can now add the ‘climate cliff’ (which one can almost see as an upside…

  • Science in Public 2013 – Call for Panel Proposals

    UPDATE: You can see the full Call For Papers including details of all the proposed panels at http://scienceinpublic.org/conference/  8th Annual Science in Public Conference, 22-23 July 2013 on ‘Critical Perspectives on Making Science Public’ Call for Panel Proposals The University of Nottingham is proud to host the 8th Annual Science in Public Conference, 22-23 July 2013.…

  • Inside climate science: the opening and closing of IPCC expertise

    Inside climate science: the opening and closing of IPCC expertise

    This is a guest post by the University of Nottingham’s Paul Matthews – outlining what he can (and can’t!) divulge about the IPCC’s peer review process. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is the scientific body established by the United Nations to provide assessments of current knowledge in this complex and controversial field of…

  • From Katrina to Sandy: Searching online for links to climate change

    From Katrina to Sandy: Searching online for links to climate change

    This blog has been written by Alan Valdez (Open University) and Brigitte Nerlich When Hurricane Sandy, aka Superstorm, aka Frankenstrom, hit the Eastern Seaboard on 29 October and in particular New York, it caused extensive damage and left at least 199 people dead. It has been widely reported to be “the largest Atlantic hurricane on…

  • Short circuiting the language of Sandy – how to balance literalism and lucidity?

    Short circuiting the language of Sandy – how to balance literalism and lucidity?

    My previous post here at MSP reflected on comments in the BBC’s Climategate Revisited programme, suggesting that uncertainties in climate science have come to the fore in the years following the  publication of scientists’ emails. By being more open about such uncertainties, there may be a hope that some of the public trust lost after…

  • Echoes of Climategate: focusing on uncertainty?

    Echoes of Climategate: focusing on uncertainty?

    The ever-lively climate blogosphere was given an extra jolt recently by a new BBC Radio 4 documentary – Climategate Revisited. The programme assessed the fallout from the infamous publication of emails from the University of East Anglia (UEA) server, rather than attempting to adjudicate on scientific claims or the contents of the emails. The programme…

  • Debunking NIMBYs

    Debunking NIMBYs

    Guest post by Beverley Gibbs (originally posted on her own blog). Photo courtesy of Lightsight. You’ve heard of NIMBY? Not In My Back Yard? It’s a term some people use to describe individuals – or more commonly groups – within local communities who resist new developments. The new developments can be anything including prisons, landfill sites,…

  • Science, politics and the new scepticism

    While I blogged on MSP a couple of times while finishing up my thesis on local and regional climate policy, I have now started on the programme full time as a Research Fellow. My project has a working title of Science, politics and scepticism in the age of new media, and aims to “map the…

  • Taking charge of the apocalypse: On serendipity, walruses and last men

    Taking charge of the apocalypse: On serendipity, walruses and last men

    A week ago somebody sent me this YouTube video of a walrus that makes noises on command. I sent it on to a few people, including my sister. She sent me back a picture of a sea lion taken while on holiday in Alaska, which I have used as the featured image for this blog.…

  • Unseasonable weather; unseasonable climate? Facts, fictions and fantasies

    Unseasonable weather; unseasonable climate? Facts, fictions and fantasies

    I have just come back from a place in Dorset that my husband’s family has visited every summer for the last forty years or so and that I have visited for the last twenty. I sometimes needed to take and wear an anorak. This has changed and I have been wearing it more often over…