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Who or what has agency in the discussion of antimicrobial resistance in UK news media (2010-2015)?:A transitivity analysis
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Who or what has agency in the discussion of antimicrobial resistance in UK news media (2010-2015)? A transivity analysis
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Who or what has agency in the discussion of antimicrobial resistance in UK news media (2010-2015)?: a transitivity analysis
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How certain is ‘certain’?:Exploring how the English-language media reported the use of calibrated language in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report
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Abstract:
This article presents findings from an analysis of English-language media reports following the publication of the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Assessment Report in September 2013. Focusing on the way they reported the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s use of ‘calibrated’ language, we find that of 1906 articles relating to the issuing of the report only 272 articles (14.27%) convey the use of a deliberate and systematic verbal scale. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s carefully calibrated language was rarely discussed or explicated, but in some instances scientists, political actors or journalists would attempt to contextualise or elaborate on the reported findings by using analogies to other scientific principles or examples of taking action despite uncertainty. We consider those analogies in terms of their efficacy in communicating (un)certainty.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/0963662515579626 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/126848/
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Uncertainty discourses in the context of climate change:A corpus-assisted analysis of UK national newspaper articles
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Uncertainty discourses in the context of climate change: a corpus-assisted analysis of UK national newspaper articles
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How certain is ‘certain’?: exploring how the English-language media reported the use of calibrated language in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report
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Climate change and ‘climategate’ in online reader comments: a mixed methods study
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Metaphors we die by? Geoengineering, metaphors and the argument from catastrophe
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Climate change and 'climategate' in online reader comments: a mixed methods study
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From carbon markets to carbon morality: creative compounds as framing devices in online discourses on climate change mitigation
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