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Journal ArticleDOI

Human choice and climate change

Steve Rayner, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
- Vol. 77, Iss: 6, pp 146
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TLDR
The authors provide an international view of climate change which is designed to complement the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Second Assessment report and provide a benchmark document summarizing current understanding of of the contributions of the social sciences to the interdisciplinary issues of global climate change.
Abstract
This is four-part work providing an international view of climate change which is designed to complement the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Second Assessment report. The complete work is a benchmark document summarising current understanding of of the contributions of the social sciences to the interdisciplinary issues of global climate change. It brings together widely scattered information and highlights both current research strengths and key areas for further research. The books survey the state of the art of the social sciences with regard to global climate change research; recognise global climate change research as policy relevant; review what is currently known, uncertain, and unknown in the social science areas relevant to global change; assemble and summarise findings from the international research community; report these findings within behavioural and interpretive frameworks as appropriate; and assemble this information to enlighten the future formulation and conduct of policy-relevant scientific research. The volumes in this four-part work cover resources and technology (Volume 2); tools for policy analysis (Volume 3); and, in Volume 1, begin with the societal framework. Volume 4 is presented as a readable summary for non-professionals. The first chapter of Volume 4 comprises the introductory section of each of the three more specialist volumes.

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Typology of sociotechnical transition pathways

TL;DR: In this paper, a typology of four transition pathways: transformation, reconfiguration, technological substitution, and de-alignment and re-alignments is presented, which differ in combinations of timing and nature of multi-level interactions.
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Regime shifts to sustainability through processes of niche formation : the approach of strategic niche management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe how technical change is locked into dominant technological regimes, and present a perspective, called strategic niche management, on how to expedite a transition into a new regime.
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The multi-level perspective on sustainability transitions: Responses to seven criticisms

TL;DR: The multi-level perspective (MLP) has emerged as a fruitful middle-range framework for analysing socio-technical transitions to sustainability as discussed by the authors. But the MLP also received constructive criticisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate Change Risk Perception and Policy Preferences: The Role of Affect, Imagery, and Values

TL;DR: The authors found that American risk perceptions and policy support are strongly influenced by experiential factors, including affect, imagery, and values, and demonstrates that public responses to climate change are influenced by both psychological and socio-cultural factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers perceived to engaging with climate change among the UK public and their policy implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the barriers that members of the UK public perceive to engaging with climate change and argue that targeted and tailored information provision should be supported by wider structural change to enable citizens and communities to reduce carbon dependency.
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