This paper makes three contributions to the developing literature on public opinion and understanding of CCS. The first is a discussion of online focus groups as a deliberative method in experimental and perhaps consultative contexts. The second is the role of anchoring and associative reasoning in the development of public opinion of CCS, illustrated through the coincidental timing of the investigation with the Fukushima nuclear accident. The third is a discussion of managing public-facing energy messaging in an age of public access to online information. Two multi-day, online focus groups or "dialogue boards" were held, one in Poland and one in Spain, with participants drawn from regions with active CCS development potential. The nature o...
AbstractA public survey was conducted concerning carbon capture and storage technology (CCS) in the ...
Part 5: Social Media and Social Network AnalysisInternational audienceThis paper suggests how eGover...
Ever since the advent of the Internet, political communication scholars have debated its potential t...
The meltdown at the Japanese Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant (March 2011) provided a trigger t...
AbstractThere are a variety of stakeholders involved with CCS, including the general public who may ...
The Internet provides fast and ubiquitous communication that enables all kinds of communities and pr...
The Internet is often praised for its ability to provide a space to enable every person to present h...
The meltdown at the Japanese Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant (March 2011) provided a trigger t...
The Internet provides fast and ubiquitous communication that enables all kinds of communities and pr...
Edited by the Policy Studies Organization (PSO), the Oxford Internet Institute (OII), and Berkeley E...
The advent of the Internet has prompted a range of arguments about the political significance of new...
How users discuss climate change online is one of the crucial questions (science) communication scho...
In this article, we investigate Internet discourses that capture Canadians’ perceptions of the risk ...
In this article, we investigate Internet discourses that capture Canadians’ perceptions of the risk ...
As the rate at which people use media to interact with one another increases, the volume of research...
AbstractA public survey was conducted concerning carbon capture and storage technology (CCS) in the ...
Part 5: Social Media and Social Network AnalysisInternational audienceThis paper suggests how eGover...
Ever since the advent of the Internet, political communication scholars have debated its potential t...
The meltdown at the Japanese Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant (March 2011) provided a trigger t...
AbstractThere are a variety of stakeholders involved with CCS, including the general public who may ...
The Internet provides fast and ubiquitous communication that enables all kinds of communities and pr...
The Internet is often praised for its ability to provide a space to enable every person to present h...
The meltdown at the Japanese Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant (March 2011) provided a trigger t...
The Internet provides fast and ubiquitous communication that enables all kinds of communities and pr...
Edited by the Policy Studies Organization (PSO), the Oxford Internet Institute (OII), and Berkeley E...
The advent of the Internet has prompted a range of arguments about the political significance of new...
How users discuss climate change online is one of the crucial questions (science) communication scho...
In this article, we investigate Internet discourses that capture Canadians’ perceptions of the risk ...
In this article, we investigate Internet discourses that capture Canadians’ perceptions of the risk ...
As the rate at which people use media to interact with one another increases, the volume of research...
AbstractA public survey was conducted concerning carbon capture and storage technology (CCS) in the ...
Part 5: Social Media and Social Network AnalysisInternational audienceThis paper suggests how eGover...
Ever since the advent of the Internet, political communication scholars have debated its potential t...