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Christopher P. Quine
Researcher at University of Bath
Publications - 27
Citations - 1035
Christopher P. Quine is an academic researcher from University of Bath. The author has contributed to research in topics: Risk management framework & Risk assessment. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 27 publications receiving 929 citations.
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UK National Ecosystem Assessment:Technical report
Robert T. Watson,Steve D. Albon,R. Aspinall,Melanie C. Austen,B. Bardgett,Ian J. Bateman,Pam Berry,William Bird,Richard B. Bradbury,Claire Brown,J Bulloch,Jacquelin Burgess,Andrew Church,C Christie,I. R. Crute,Linda Davies,Gareth Edwards-Jones,Bridget A. Emmett,Les G. Firbank,Alastair Fitter,A. Gibson,Rosemary S. Hails,Roy Haines-Young,Ann Louise Heathwaite,John J. Hopkins,M. Jenkins,Laurence Jones,Georgina M. Mace,S.J. Malcolm,Edward Maltby,Lindsay C. Maskell,Ken Norris,Stephen James Ormerod,Juliet L. Osborne,Jules Pretty,Christopher P. Quine,Shona Russell,Lucy Simpson,Pete Smith,M Tierney,Krista L. Turner,R. Van der Wal,Bhaskar Vira,Matt Walpole,Andrew R. Watkinson,A. Weighell,Jonathan Winn,Michael Winter +47 more
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Management of forests to reduce the risk of abiotic damage — a review with particular reference to the effects of strong winds
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the process of managing risks to reduce abiotic damage to forests and give particular emphasis to wind damage and to methods of risk assessment, using a detailed description of the ForestGALES wind risk model to demonstrate the deterministic/probabilistic approach to risk assessment.
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The social amplification of risk on Twitter: the case of ash dieback disease in the United Kingdom
John Fellenor,Julie Barnett,Clive Potter,Julie Urquhart,John D. Mumford,Christopher P. Quine +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the social media platform Twitter to consider the social amplification of risk in relation to ash dieback disease (Hymenoscyphus fraxineus); a tree health issue that attracted intense media attention when it was first identified in the UK in 2012.
UK National Ecosystem Assessment:understanding nature's value to society. Synthesis of key findings
Robert T. Watson,Steve D. Albon,R. Aspinall,Melanie C. Austen,B. Bardgett,Ian J. Bateman,Pam Berry,William Bird,Richard B. Bradbury,Claire Brown,James M. Bullock,Jacquelin Burgess,Andrew Church,C Christie,I. R. Crute,Linda Davies,Gareth Edwards-Jones,Bridget A. Emmett,Les G. Firbank,Alastair Fitter,A. Gibson,Rosemary S. Hails,Roy Haines-Young,Heathwaite A. L.,Louise Heathwaite,John J. Hopkins,M. Jenkins,Laurence Jones,Georgina M. Mace,S.J. Malcolm,E. Maltby,Lindsay C. Maskell,Ken Norris,Stephen James Ormerod,Juliet L. Osborne,Jules Pretty,Christopher P. Quine,Shona Russell,L. Simpson,Pete Smith,M Tierney,Turner. K.,R. Van der Wal,Bhaskar Vira,Matt Walpole,Andrew R. Watkinson,A. Weighell,J. Winn,Michael Winter +48 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Frameworks for risk communication and disease management: the case of Lyme disease and countryside users
Christopher P. Quine,Julie Barnett,Andrew D. M. Dobson,Afrodita Marcu,Mariella Marzano,Darren Moseley,Liz O'Brien,Sarah E. Randolph,Jennifer L. Taylor,David Uzzell +9 more
TL;DR: A conceptual framework based on the pressure–state–response model with five broad responses to disease incidence is introduced by reference to tick-borne Lyme borreliosis, for which informed precautionary behaviour is particularly relevant.