Making sense of global warming: Norwegians appropriating knowledge of anthropogenic climate change

Public Underst Sci. 2011 Nov;20(6):778-95. doi: 10.1177/0963662510362657.

Abstract

This paper studies how people reason about and make sense of human-made global warming, based on ten focus group interviews with Norwegian citizens. It shows that the domestication of climate science knowledge was shaped through five sense-making devices: news media coverage of changes in nature, particularly the weather, the coverage of presumed experts' disagreement about global warming, critical attitudes towards media, observations of political inaction, and considerations with respect to everyday life. These sense-making devices allowed for ambiguous outcomes, and the paper argues four main outcomes with respect to the domestication processes: the acceptors, the tempered acceptors, the uncertain and the sceptics.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Attitude*
  • Climate Change*
  • Female
  • Focus Groups
  • Global Warming
  • Humans
  • Knowledge*
  • Male
  • Mass Media*
  • Norway
  • Policy
  • Politics