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Source: Yale Review
2 December 2010 | EN
It has been a challenging 12 months for climate journalists, as they try to keep their audiences informed
Flickr/ Internews Network
What lessons has the climate science community learned from the University of East Anglia's 'climategate' e-mails, the row over a mistake about glaciers by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and disappointment over the Copenhagen climate change negotiations?
The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media also asks climate scientists what lessons should they learn after a "challenging 12 months" and whether they are putting lessons learned into practice. It puts similar questions to a group of journalists covering climate issues.
Responses included the possibility, raised by Michael Oppenheimer, Albert G. Milbank professor of geosciences and international affairs at Princeton University, United States, that scientists, particularly younger ones, might avoid areas of research associated with public controversy, like climate change, or avoid interacting with government, media or the general public, even to explain the significance of their own research.
Several scientists referred to criticisms in phrases such as "organized campaigns of disinformation" or "powerful forces of unreason." Another common thread was encapsulated by Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute, United States, with his comment that "every climate scientist (we're supposed to be smart, eh?) has learned that e-mails must always be assumed to be completely public!"
Link to full article in The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media
JS ( United Kingdom )
8 February 2011
I commend the comments section appended to the article you link to in The Yale Forum. Much more good sense is expressed there. The main lesson learned by one 'side' seems to be: when the science is flaky and there is no empirical support, learn to spin and suppress to better effect.
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