Applied Research

Environment

Interpretive Communities of Risk

For more information on Anthony Leiserowitz's work on Interpretive Communities of Risk, click here.

596 Failing, L., Gregory, R., & Harstone, M. (2007). Integrating science and local knowledge in environmental risk management: A decision-focused approach. Ecological Economics, 64, 47-60.

560 Leiserowitz, A. A. (2007). Communicating the risks of global warming: American risk perceptions, affective images and interpretive communities. In S. C. Moser & L. Dilling (Eds.), Creating a climate for change: Communicating climate change and facilitating social change (pp. 44-63). New York: Cambridge University Press.

537 Kates, R. W., Parris, R. M., & Leiserowitz, A. A. (2005). What is sustainable development? Goals, indicators, values, and practice. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, 47(3), 8-21. (Download; 2.7 MB, PDF)

483 Finucane, M.L. (2002). Mad cows, mad corn and mad communities: The role of socio-cultural factors in the perceived risk of genetically-modified food. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 61, 31-37.

466 Gregory, R.S., & Satterfield, T.A. (2002). Beyond perception: The experience of risk and stigma in community contexts. Risk Analysis, 22(2), 347-358.

471 Gregory, R., & Wellman, K. (2001). Bringing stakeholder values into environmental policy choices: A community-based estuary case study. Ecological Economics, 39, 37-52.

443 Satterfield, T.A. (2000). Risk, remediation and the stigma of a technological accident in an African-American community. Human Ecology Review, 7(1), 1-11.

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