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Full of Hot Air? Three Examinations of Climate Change in the American Political Information Environment.

机译:满满的热空气?美国政治信息环境中的三项气候变化考核。

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摘要

Climate change is thought to be one of the most pressing environmental problems facing humanity. However, due in part to failures in political communication and how the issue has been historically defined in American politics, discussions of climate change remain gridlocked and polarized. In this dissertation, I explore how climate change has been historically constructed as a political issue, how conflicts between climate advocates and skeptics have been communicated, and what effects polarization has had on political communication, particularly on the communication of climate change to skeptical audieces. I use a variety of methodological tools to consider these questions, including evolutionary frame analysis, which uses textual data to show how issues are framed and constructed over time; Kullback-Leibler divergence content analysis, which allows for comparison of advocate and skeptical framing over time; and experimental framing methods to test how audiences react to and process different presentations of climate change. I identify six major portrayals of climate change from 1988 to 2012, but find that no single construction of the issue has dominated the public discourse defining the problem. In addition, the construction of climate change may be associated with changes in public political sentiment, such as greater pessimism about climate action when the electorate becomes more conservative. As the issue of climate change has become more polarized in American politics, one proposed causal pathway for the observed polarization is that advocate and skeptic framing of climate change focuses on different facets of the issue and ignores rival arguments, a practice known as "talking past." However, I find no evidence of increased talking past in 25 years of popular newsmedia reporting on the issue, suggesting both that talking past has not driven public polarization or that polarization is occurring in venues outside of the mainstream public discourse, such as blogs. To examine how polarization affects political communication on climate change, I test the cognitive processing of a variety of messages and sources that promote action against climate change among Republican individuals. Rather than identifying frames that are powerful enough to overcome polarization, I find that Republicans exhibit telltale signs of motivated skepticism on the issue, that is, they reject framing that runs counter to their party line and political identity. This result suggests that polarization constrains political communication on polarized issues, overshadowing traditional message and source effects of framing and increasing the difficulty communicators experience in reaching skeptical audiences.
机译:人们认为气候变化是人类面临的最紧迫的环境问题之一。但是,部分由于政治交流的失败以及该问题在美国政治中的历史定义如何,有关气候变化的讨论仍然陷入僵局和两极分化。在这篇论文中,我探讨了气候变化在历史上是如何构成政治问题的,气候倡导者与怀疑论者之间的冲突是如何传达的,以及两极分化对政治传播,特别是气候变化与怀疑的听众之间的传播产生了什么影响。我使用各种方法论工具来考虑这些问题,包括进化框架分析,该框架使用文本数据来显示问题如何随着时间的推移而构建和构建。 Kullback-Leibler差异内容分析,可以比较一段时间内的倡导者框架和怀疑框架;以及实验性框架方法来测试观众如何应对和处理不同的气候变化表现。我确定了从1988年到2012年的六个主要气候变化写照,但是发现没有一个单一的问题结构主导了定义问题的公众话语。此外,气候变化的建设可能与公众政治情绪的变化有关,例如当选民变得更加保守时,人们对气候行动的悲观情绪就会增强。随着气候变化问题在美国政治中变得更加两极分化,一种建议的观察到的两极分化的因果途径是,对气候变化的拥护者和怀疑框架关注该问题的不同方面,而忽略了竞争对手的论点,这种做法被称为“谈论过去”。 ”。但是,我发现没有证据表明过去25年间流行的新闻媒体对此话题进行了报道,这表明过去的谈话并没有导致公众的两极分化,或者说在主流公共话语之外的场所(例如博客)中出现了两极分化。为了检验两极分化如何影响有关气候变化的政治交流,我测试了对促进共和党个人采取行动应对气候变化的各种信息和来源的认知加工过程。我发现共和党人没有找到足以克服两极分化的强大框架,反而表现出对这个问题的积极怀疑的明显迹象,也就是说,他们拒绝与党派路线和政治认同背道而驰的框架。这一结果表明,两极化限制了两极化问题上的政治交流,掩盖了传统的信息和框架的来源效应,并增加了传播者在接触怀疑的受众方面遇到的困难。

著录项

  • 作者

    Zhou, Menglin.;

  • 作者单位

    Duke University.;

  • 授予单位 Duke University.;
  • 学科 Political science.;Climate change.;Environmental studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 163 p.
  • 总页数 163
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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