Preface: Climate Change in the Spotlight
1. Introduction: Trying to Make Sense of Disparate Arguments about Climate Change
2. The Many Faces of Dispute
3. Climate Change - Part of Globalization?
4. Arguments - Agreeing and Disagreeing
5. Finding Common Ground: The Features of the Arguments Themselves
6. Elements of Arguments as Social Links
7. Beyond Family Ties: Social Network Analysis
8. Prospects for the Debate: Endless Recycling of Arguments or Movement toward Agreement?
Appendix 1 Arguments sorted by family with coded rhetorical features
Appendix 2. Documents listed by argument
Visit http://www.earthscan.co.uk/dcc for free electronic supplementary material: First-stage analysis of the 100 documents examined in this book.
Elizabeth L. Malone is a sociologist and Senior Research Scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Washington and has been doing research on climate change as a dimension of human change for over a decade. She co-edited with Steve Rayner the four volume set 'Human Choice and Climate Change' (Battelle Press, 1998).
'As climate change has moved from the science pages to the front
page of the world's newspapers, this very timely book makes sense
of the current debates in climate policy. With admirable rigour
Elizabeth L. Malone demonstrates that despite the diversity of
arguments, all is not yet lost and agreement is in reach.'
Dr Richard J.T. Klein, Stockholm Environment Institute 'Climate
change calls for new engagement across partisan, disciplinary, and
institutional divides. Elizabeth Malone's important new book helps
us better understand these fault lines and find ways to bring
people and ideas together.'
Barry Rabe, Professor, Gerald Ford School of Public Policy,
University of Michigan 'The book is well written and takes the
reader gradually through the analytical process...This is an
interesting read for all those interested in the climate change
debate'
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers
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