Tuesday, August 30, 2016

#8 Dunlap, Jacques - History of Climate Science Denial, Notes and References (with links)


This is the eighth and final installment of Dunlap, Jacques' (2013) study of the history of our dysfunctional public climate science education dialogue.  They focus on the influence of "conservative think tanks (CTTs) on the output of "skeptical" climate science book publications.  

This installment is a copy of their Notes and Reference sections. I have added links to the references. 

With these sources you can learn about how out and out lying became the mainstay of the Republican climate science contrarian PR strategy. 

Given that the study has a CCA License I decided to Repost their interesting effort over here.  It makes worthy addition to my collection.  I thank Riley Dunlap and Peter Jacques for the opportunity to Repost their impressive work.

#8 Notes and References
_________________________________________________________

The American Behavioral Scientist

Climate Change Denial Books and 
Conservative Think Tanks
Exploring the Connection 


Copyright © 2013 SAGE PublicationsThis is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Am Behav Sci. 2013 Jun; 57(6): 699–731.

#8 Notes and References
Notes

1. ISBNs represent a useful operationalization of what constitutes a book, although a few of the volumes could be considered booklets or pamphlets.

2. We do this because we do not want to overrepresent authors in the various analyses reported below. The two books by William Hunt published in 2009 and 2010 were sufficiently different that we decided to include both of them.

3. Books referred to in text that are listed in the appendix are not listed in the references.

4. McCright and Dunlap (2000) found a surge in a wide range of material criticizing climate science, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and the Kyoto Protocol posted on the websites of conservative think tanks leading up to the Kyoto Conference.

5. “Self-published” books are those where the author is the principal actor in printing the book. This includes authors paying vanity presses to print their books and those creating their own presses.

6. Singer is well-known for initiating “petitions” of scientists who criticize climate science, including the Heidelberg Appeal and the Leipzig Declaration (Hoggan, 2009, p. 92; Powell, 2011, pp. 55-56).

7. Limiting our analysis to books published in English leads us to ignore a small number of denial books in other languages.

8. These include three JDs (Jonathan Alder, Mark Bloomfield, and Christopher Horner), two MDs (Stanley Feldman and Vincent Marks), one ThD (William Curtis), and one DVM (Zachary Robinson)—all professional doctorates that are equated with PhDs.

9. We acknowledge that individuals without doctorates can develop considerable expertise with relevant work experience, and some would see, for example, Brian Sussman and Anthony Watts as having relevant expertise based on their experience as meteorologists and weather forecasters. However, meteorologists specialize in short-term weather and not long-term climate and lack training in climate science and often hold views of AGW at odds with those of mainstream climate scientists (e.g., Maibach, Wilson, & Witte, 2011).

10. The closest is Patrick Michaels’s Shattered Consensus, which was copublished by the Marshall Institute and Rowman & Littlefield, the latter a respected academic press.

11. A good example is the highly debunked—but successful in terms of sales, publicity, and policy impact—book by Australian geologist and mining executive Ian Plimer, Heaven and Earth: Global Warming, the Missing Science (see the critiques cited in McKewon, 2012, and Washington & Cook, 2011). For a good and continually updated overview of denial claims that have been debunked by mainstream scientists, see http://skepticalscience.com/.

12. See Weart (2008, 2011) on the operation of these processes in the evolution of climate science.

References
Anderegg W. R. L., Prall J. W., Harold J., Schneider S. H. (2010). Expert credibility in climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 107(27), 12107-12109 [PMC free article] [PubMed]

Barley S. (2011, February 25). Real Climate faces libel suit. Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/feb/25/real-climate-libel-threat

Brulle R. J., Carmichael J., Jenkins C. J. (2012). Shifting public opinion on climate change: An empirical assessment of factors influencing concern over climate change in the U.S., 2002–2010. Climatic Change, 114, 169-188

Dunlap R. E - Vita

Dunlap R. E. (1987, Jul-Aug). Polls, pollution, and politics revisited: Public opinion on the environment in the Reagan era. Environment, 29, 6-11, 32-37.

Dunlap R. E., McCright A. M. (2011). Organized climate change denial. In Dryzek J. S., Norgaard R. B., Schlosberg D., editors. (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of climate change (pp. 144-160). London, UK: Oxford

Dunlap R. E. 2013. 
Climate Change Skepticism and Denial: An Introduction

Dunlap R. E., McCright A. M. (2011)
Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States

Gore A. (2006). An inconvenient truth. Emmaus, PA: Rodale Books

Hacker J. S., Pierson P. (2007). Tax politics and the struggle over activist government. In Pierson P., Skocpol T., editors. (Eds.), The transformation of American politics (pp. 256-280). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press

Hamilton C. (2007). Scorcher: The dirty politics of climate change. Melbourne, Australia: Black Inc. Agenda

Hoffman A. J. (2012, Fall). Climate science as culture war. Stanford Social Innovation Review, 10, 30-37

Hoggan J., with Littlemore, R. (2009). Climate cover-up: The crusade to deny global warming. Vancouver, Canada: Greystone Books
Jacques P. (2006). The rearguard of modernity: Environmental skepticism as a struggle of citizenship. Global Environmental Politics, 6, 76-101

Jacques P. J., Dunlap R. E., Freeman M. (2008). The organization of denial: Conservative think tanks and environmental scepticism. Environmental Politics, 17, 349-385

Lahsen M. (2008). Experiences of modernity in the greenhouse. Global Environmental Change, 18, 204-219

Leiserowitz A. A., Maibach E. W., Roser-Renouf C., Hmielowski J. D. (2011). Politics and global warming: Democrats, Republicans, Independents, & the Tea Party. New Haven, CT: Yale Project on Climate Change Communication

Maibach E., Wilson K., Witte J. (2011). A national survey of television meteorologists about climate change education.   Fairfax, VA: George Mason University, Center for Climate Change Education

McCright A. M., Dunlap R. E. (2000). Challenging global warming as a social problem: An analysis of the conservative movement’s counter-claims. Social Problems, 47, 499-522

McCright A. M., Dunlap R. E. (2003). Defeating Kyoto: The conservative movement’s impact on U.S. climate change policy. Social Problems, 50, 348-373

McCright A. M., Dunlap R. E. (2011). The politicization of climate change: Political polarization in the American public’s views of global warming. Sociological Quarterly, 52, 155-194

McKewon E. (2012). Duelling realities: Conspiracy theories vs. climate science in regional newspaper coverage of Ian Plimer’s book, Heaven & Earth. Rural Society, 21, 99-115

Michaels D. (2008). Doubt is their product. New York, NY: Oxford University Press

Monbiot G. (2007). Heat. Cambridge, MA: South End
Nisbet M. C., Meyers T. (2007). Twenty years of public opinion about global warming. Public Opinion Quarterly, 71, 444-470

Oreskes N., Conway E. M. (2010). Merchants of doubt. New York, NY: Bloomsbury

Pooley E. (2010). The climate war. New York, NY: Hyperion

Powell J. L. (2011). The inquisition of climate science. New York, NY: Columbia University Press

Rahmstorf S. (2004). The climate skeptics. In Re Munich., editor. (Ed.), Weather catastrophes & climate change (pp. 76-83). Munich, Germany: Munich Re

Smith M. A. (2007). The right talk. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press

Stefanic J., Delgado R. (1996). No mercy: How conservative think tanks and foundations changed America’s social agenda. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press
{Conservative think tanks and foundations have systematically promoted a conservative revolution by funding a variety of issue-oriented studies and programs.}

Strang D., Soule S. A. (1998). Diffusion in organizations and social movements. Annual Review of Sociology, 24, 265-290

Teles S. M. (2007). The rise of the conservative legal movement. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press

Union of Concerned Scientists (2012). A climate of corporate control: How corporations have influenced the U.S. dialogue on climate science and policy. Cambridge, MA: Author

Washington H., Cook J. (2011). Climate change denial: Heads in the sand. London, UK: Earthscan

Weart S. R. (2008). The discovery of global warming (Rev. & exp. ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press

Weart S. (2011). Global warming: How skepticism became denial. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 67(1), 41-50

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