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Building an environmental agenda a content and frame analysis of news about the environment in the United States, 1890 to 1960 /Knight, Jan E. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Ohio University, March, 2010. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references.
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Climate change risk communication and asset adaptation of indigenous farmers in the Delta State of NigeriaEbhuoma, Eromose Ehije January 2017 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, School of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Johannesburg, October, 2017. / The purpose of this study was to examine how subsistence farmers in the Delta State of Nigeria employed their asset portfolios i.e. human, financial, social, natural and physical capitals to build their adaptive capacity and resilience to climate variability and change. The study was also interested in understanding the extent to which climate change risk communication facilitated the protection and adaptation of subsistence farmer’s assets in the face of extreme weather warnings.
Primary data were obtained using the Participatory Climate Change Adaptation Appraisal (PCCAA), which comprises both the asset vulnerability analytical and the asset-based adaptation operational frameworks. The systems thinking approach, together with the asset vulnerability analytical framework were also used as an operational vulnerability framework to highlight the myriad factors undermining the rural poor from maximising their asset portfolios during food production. Focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews facilitated the use of the PCCAA tools.
Meteorological data reinforced subsistence farmer’s perception (62%) that there has been an increase in temperature within the last decade, which have adversely affected on groundnut production. The farmers (92%) also listed heavy rainfall event and flooding as a climatic variable that impede their ability to produce cassava throughout the year. This is because their farmlands, which are generally low-lying, are always inundated for approximately four months every year. Nonetheless, the farmers still engaged in cassava production annually by adopting a strategy indigenously referred to as elelame (follow-water-go).
It is important to mention that in spite of the rapidly changing climate, the subsistence farmers did not rely on Seasonal Climate Forecast (SCF) in order to determine the appropriate time to grow their food. Instead, they relied on their Indigenous Knowledge
Systems (IKS) not limited to cloud observations, croaking of frogs and peculiar sounds made by the swamp chickens. However, the farmers acknowledged that their IKS have not been as reliable as it has always been in the past decades. Nonetheless, the farmers underlined being misled by an inaccurate scientific forecast in 2013 and, a lack of trust in the source of the forecast are some of the reasons they continue to rely primarily on IKS.
With climate change expected to continue occurring at unprecedented levels in Nigeria, it is crucial to build subsistence farmers trust in SCF while simultaneously not undermining the value of their IKS. This is because there is growing consensus that if subsistence farmers continue to rely on IKS alone, the key assets that play a huge role in food production will likely be eroded. This will adversely hamper households’ ability to continue obtaining the livelihood they aggressively pursue. Thus, a useful starting point will be to generate a “unified” forecast whereby SCF compensates for the limitations of farmer’s IKS. However, for the unified forecast to make meaningful contributions to the ways in which farmers produce their food and protect their assets in anticipation of an extreme weather forecast, it must be communicated through the various mediums that the farmers rely upon to receive vital pieces of information.
Keywords: Indigenous knowledge systems, seasonal climate forecast, climate change risk communication, Delta State, Nigeria. / LG2018
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The role of political environment and the adoption of new information technology for citizen participation and communication by United States municipal governmentAhn, Michael Ji-Sung. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Syracuse University, 2007. / "Publication number: AAT 3281715."
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Parks in public parking : empowering community members to reintegrate nature into the citySoutham, Theresa 16 September 2010 (has links)
This research explores how community leaders could use Corbett’s Spectrum
of Environmental Ideologies (2006) to analyze the ideologies of communication
campaigns before adopting one into a community. In this research, a mixed age
class of elementary students and local artisans created two “parks” in public
parking spaces and participated in an arts contest in Nelson, BC. This action
research used analytic coding to reflect on participants’ relationship with nature
based on their response to: international Park(ing) Day and Transition Nelson.
Additionally, participant recommendations for greening Nelson’s downtown core
were compared with four models of social change for generating ecocentric
solutions. Ecocentric solutions stem from the belief that humans and nature are
interdependent. Found to be key were nurturing participants’ nascent ecocentric
values and investigating the campaign materials deeply. Additionally building
motivation, exploring alternatives, problem-solving, partnerships and improved
organizational communication are important elements of social change.
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