Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Donors Do Not Trust Cover
Open Access
|Jun 2017

References

  1. Bastian, Mathieu; Heymann, Sebastien, & Jacomy, Mathieu (2009). Gephi: An Open Source Software for Exploring and Manipulating Networks. Paper presented at the Third International ICWSM Conference, San Jose, CA.
  2. Bennett, W. Lance; Foot, Kirsten, & Xenos, Michael (2011). Narratives and Network Organization: A Comparison of Fair Trade Systems in Two Nations. Journal of Communication 61(2): 219–245.
  3. Boyle, Thomas P. (2001). Intermedia Agenda Setting in the 1996 Presidential Election. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 78(1): 26–44.
  4. Brulle, Robert J. (2013). Institutionalizing Delay: Foundation Funding and the Creation of U.S. Climate Change Counter-movement Organizations. Climatic Change, 122(4): 681–694.
  5. Callon, Michel (1999). Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of Saint Brieuc Bay, pp. 67–83 in Biagioli, Mario (ed.) The Sciencer Studies Reader. New York: Routledge.
  6. Casey-Lefkowitz, Susan, & Shope, Elizabeth (2011). Say No to Tar Sands Pipeline: Proposed Keystone XL Project Would Delivery Dirty Fuel at a High Cost. Nature Resources Defense Council. http://www.nrdc.org/land/files/TarSandsPipeline4pgr.
  7. Chang, Tsan-Kuo; Himelboim, Itai, & Dong (2009). Open Global Networks, Closed International Flows: World System and Political Economy of Hyperlinks in Cyberspace. International Communication Gazette, 71(3): 137–159.
  8. Climate Doctrine (2009). Climate Doctrine of the Russian Federation. Kremlin.ru. http://archive.kremlin.ru/eng/text/docs/2009/12/223509.shtml.
  9. DARA (2011). Climate Vulnerability Monitor 2010. Non-profit organisation DARA international. http://daraint.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/CVM_Complete-1-August-2011.
  10. Denham, Bryan E. (2010). Toward Conceptual Consistency in Studies of Agenda-Building Processes: A Scholarly Review. Review of Communication, 10(4): 306–323.
  11. Dunlap, Riley E., & McCright, Aaron M. (2010). Climate Change Denial: Sources, Actors and Strategies, pp. 240–260 in Lever-Tracy, Constance (ed.) Routledge Handbook of Climate Change and Society. New York: Routledge.
  12. EDGAR (2013). Trends in global CO2 emissions: 2013 Report. The Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research. http://edgar.jrc.ec.europa.eu/news_docs/pbl-2013-trends-in-global-co2-emissions-2013-report-1148.
  13. Eide, Elisabeth & Kunelius, Risto (2010). Domesticating Global Moments – A Transnational Study on the Coverage of the Bali and Copenhagen Climate Summits. In Global Climate, Local Journalisms: A Trans-national Study of How Media Make Sense of Climate Summits, pp. 11–50 in Eide, Elisabeth; Kunelius Risto, & Kumpu Ville. Bochum: Projectverlag.
  14. Golan, Guy (2006). Inter-media Agenda Setting and Global News Coverage. Journalism Studies, 7(2): 323–333.
  15. Groshek, Jacob (2008). Homogenous Agendas, Disparate Frames: CNN and CNN International Coverage Online. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 52(1): 52–68. doi: 10.1080/08838150701820809.
  16. Gunster, Shane (2011). Covering Copenhagen: Climate Change in BC Media. Canadian Journal of Communication, 36(3): 477–502.
  17. Halavais, Alexander (2000). National Borders on the World Wide Web. New Media & Society, 2(1): 7–28.
  18. Holliman, Richard (2011). Advocacy in the tail: Exploring the implications of ‘climategate’ for science journalism and public debate in the digital age. Journalism, 12(7): 832–846.
  19. Jacques, Peter J. (2012). A General Theory of Climate Denial. Global Environmental Politics, 12(2): 9–17.
  20. Kumpu, Ville, & Kunelius, Risto (2012). Attention, Access and Dialogue in the Global Newspaper Sample. Notes on the Dependency, Complexity and Contingency of Climate Summit Journalism, pp. 313–330 in Eide, Elisabeth, & Kunelius, Risto (eds.) Media Meets Climate. The Global Challenge for Journalism. Göteborg: Nordicom.
  21. Kunelius, Risto, & Reunanen, Esa (2012). Media in Political Power: A Parsonian View on the Differentiated Mediatization of Finnish Decision Makers. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 17(1): 56–75.
  22. Latour, Bruno; Jensen, Pablo; Venturini, Tommaso; Grauwin, Sébastian, & Boullier, Dominique (2012). The Whole is Always Smaller Than its Parts: A Digital Test of Gabriel Tardes’ Monads. The British Journal of Sociology, 63(4): 590–615.
  23. Latour, Bruno (2005). Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-network-theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  24. Latour, Bruno (2011). Networks, Societies, Spheres: Reflections of an Actor-network Theorist. International Journal of Communication, 5: 796–810.
  25. Lee, Byoungkwan; Lancendorfer, Karen M., & Lee, Ki Jung (2005). Agenda-setting and the internet: The intermedia influence of internet bulletin boards on newspaper coverage of the 2000 general election in South Korea. Asian Journal of Communication, 15(1): 57–71.
  26. Markham, Annette, & Lindgren, Simon (2014). From Object to Flow: Network Sensibilities, Symbolic Interactionism, and Social Media. Studies in Symbolic Interaction, 43: 7–41.
  27. Mayer, Jane (2016). Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right. New York: Doubleday.
  28. McCombs, Maxwell E., & Shaw, Donald L. (1972). The Agenda-Setting Function of Mass Media. Public Opinion Quarterly, 36(2): 176–187. doi: 10.1086/267990.
  29. McCombs, Maxwell (2005). A Look at Agenda-setting: Past, Present and Future. Journalism Studies, 6(4): 543–57.
  30. McRobert, David (2013). Obama’s Next Opponent: Our Vast Network of Climate Denial Think Tanks. Solid Waste & Recycling, February 14. http://www.solidwastemag.com/columns/obamas-next-opponent-our-vast-network-of-climate-denial-think-tanks/.
  31. Meraz, Sharon (2011). The Fight For ‘how to think’: Traditional media, Social Networks, and Issue Interpretation. Journalism, 12(1): 107–127.
  32. Painter, James (2011). Poles Apart: The International Reporting of Climate Scepticism. Oxford, UK: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
  33. Poberezhskaya, Marianna (2014). Reflections on Climate Change and New Media in Russia: Challenges and Opportunities. Digital Icons: Studies in Russian, Eurasian and Central European New Media 11: 37–50. http://www.digitalicons.org/issue11/marianna-poberezhskaya/
  34. Poberezhskaya, Marianna (2016). Communicating Climate Change in Russia: State and Propaganda. New York: Routledge.
  35. Russell, Adrienne; Tegelberg, Matthew; Yagodin, Dmitry; Kumpu, Ville, & Rhaman, Mofizur (2012). Digital Networks and Shifting Climate News Agendas and Practices, pp. 195–217 in Eide, Elisabeth, & Kunelius, Risto (eds.) Media Meets Climate. The Global Challenge for Journalism. Göteborg: Nordicom.
  36. Sharples, Jack D. (2013). Russian Approaches to Energy Security and Climate Change: Russian Gas Exports to the EU. Environmental Politics 22(4): 683–700.
  37. Swart, Neil C., & Weaver, Andrew J. (2012). The Alberta Oil Sands and Climate. Nature Climate Change, 2(3): 134–136.
  38. Sweetser, Kaye D.; Golan, Guy J. & Wanta, Wayne (2008). Intermedia Agenda Setting in Television, Advertising, and Blogs During the 2004 Election. Mass Communication and Society, 11(2): 197–216.
  39. Tegelberg, Matt (2010). Canada: The dirty old man of climate politics?, pp. 97–113 in Eide, Elisabeth; Kunelius, Risto & Kumpu, Ville (eds.) Global Climate, Local Journalisms: A Transnational Study of How Media Make Sense of Climate Summits. Bochum: Projectverlag.
  40. Tegelberg, Matthew; Yagodin, Dmitry, & Russell, Adrienne (2014). Climatenews: Summit Journalism and Digital Networks, in Crow, Deserai A., & Boykoff, Maxwell T. (eds.) Culture, Politics and Climate Change: How Information Shapes our Common Future. Routledge.
  41. Vesti (2013). Eksperti: Zemle ne grozit poteplenie klimata. Vesti.ru, January 10. http://www.vesti.ru/videos?vid=477728.
  42. Woodly, Deva (2008). New Competencies in Democratic Communication? Blogs, Agenda Setting and Political Participation. Public Choice 134(1–2): 109–23. doi: 10.1007/s11127-007-9204-7.
  43. Yagodin, Dmitry (2014). The Blogization of Journalism: How Blogs Politicize Media and Social Space in Russia. Tampere: Tampere University Press.
  44. Yagodin, Dmitry (2010). Russia: Listening to The Wind – Clientelism and Climate Change. In Global Climate, Local Journalisms: A Transnational Study of How Media Make Sense of Climate Summits, pp. 275–290 in Eide, Elisabeth; Kunelius, Risto & Kumpu Ville (eds.) Bochum: Projectverlag.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/nor-2016-0036 | Journal eISSN: 2001-5119 | Journal ISSN: 1403-1108
Language: English
Page range: 97 - 112
Published on: Jun 15, 2017
Published by: University of Gothenburg Nordicom
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2017 Dmitry Yagodin, Matthew Tegelberg, published by University of Gothenburg Nordicom
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.