Abstract
Abstract. The politicization of and societal debate on climate
change science have increased over the last decades. Here, the authors argue
that the role of climate scientists in our society needs to adapt in
accordance with this development. We share our experiences from the
awareness campaign Pole to Paris, which engaged non-academic audiences on
climate change issues on the roads from the polar regions to Paris and
through conventional and social media. By running and cycling across a third
of the globe, the scientists behind the initiative established connections
on the audiences' terms. Propitiously for other outreach efforts, the
exertions were not in themselves the most attractive; among our social media
followers, the messages of climate change science and action were more
favourable, as measured by video statistics and a follower survey.
Communicating climate action in itself challenges our positions as
scientists, and here we discuss the impact such messages have on our
credibility as researchers. Based on these reflections, as well as those
from other science communication initiatives, we suggest a way forward for
climate scientists in the post-factual society, who should be better trained
in interaction with non-academic audiences and pseudoscepticism.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Cited by
2 articles.
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