
Science Communication in Times of Crisis
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Content
- Intro
- Science Communication in Times of Crisis
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Chapter 1. Communicating science in crisis societies: Challenges across disciplines, contexts and nations
- The research context of this volume
- The structure of this volume
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 2. Which facts to trust in the debate on climate change?: On knowledge and plausibility in times of crisis
- Introduction: The state of facts in knowledge crises
- Questioning knowledge
- Questioning facts
- Asking a different question
- Plausibility as a pattern of thinking and reasoning
- Dissecting two knowledge crises
- The dispute between Galileo and Bellarmine
- Harald Lesch's "Clarifying misconceptions about climate change"
- James Inhofe's senate speech on climate change
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 3. Letters to power: Authority appeals in the communication of scientific consensus
- Letters to power
- Scientist Statement on Restoring Scientific Integrity to Federal Policy Making, 2004
- Science and the Public Interest, 2016
- Power in letters?
- References
- Chapter 4. Pivoting to support science communication in times of crisis: A case study of the Government of Canada's Glossary on the COVID-19 pandemic
- Introduction
- Science communication and crisis communication
- Terminology work
- De-terminologization
- Traditional terminology work
- Users of traditional terminology resources
- The Translation Bureau and the development of the Glossary on the COVID-19 pandemic
- The need for speed
- Transparency of terms
- A multifaceted perspective
- A broader notion of "termhood"
- Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Chapter 5. COVID-19 neologisms between metaphor and culture: A multilingual corpus-based study
- Introduction
- Coining neologisms in times of COVID-19
- Corpora
- English corpus
- Spanish corpus
- Arabic corpus
- Method
- Step 1: Identification of metaphor and cultural based neologisms
- Step 2: Analysis of the morphological and etymological origin of the neologism
- Results and analysis
- English terms
- Analysis of English terms
- Spanish terms
- Analysis of Spanish terms
- Arabic terms
- Analysis of Arabic terms
- Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 6. Persuasion in health communication: The case of Saudi and Australian tweets on COVID-19 vaccination
- Introduction
- Theoretical background
- Literature review
- Methodology
- Data collection
- Data coding
- Results
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Funding
- References
- Appendix A. Typology of persuasive strategies in technical discourse by Dontcheva-Navratilova, Adam, Povolná and Vogel (2020)
- Appendix B. Adaptation of the typology of persuasive strategies in technical discourse by Dontcheva-Navratilova, Adam, Povolná and Vogel (2020)
- Chapter 7. Communicating risks of an Anti-COVID-19 vaccine in Poland: A comparative case study of content, style and advocacy of three media outlets
- Introduction
- Risk and science communication in mainstream media
- Theoretical frame and empirical research on media panics
- Design of the study
- Results
- Gazeta wyborcza
- TVP info
- Onet.pl
- Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Appendix A. Gazeta Wyborcza (sample and results of news values coding)
- Appendix B. TVP Info (sample and results of news values coding)
- Appendix C. Onet.pl (sample and results of news values coding)
- Chapter 8. 'Coronavirus as a political weapon': The COVID pandemic through the lens of the us Alt-Right Media
- Introduction
- Literature review
- The Alt Right and Trump
- Coronavirus in the United States
- Methods and data
- Findings
- Keywords
- Social actor representation
- The representation of the out-group actors
- The representation of the in-group actor
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 9. Science versus?: The U.S. response to the COVID-19 pandemic
- Introduction
- The crisis communication failures of the U.S. COVID-19 response
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
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