Notes
1. The 13 networks addressed: Anticipatory Histories; Climate Histories; Cultural Framing of Environmental Discourse; Cultural Spaces of Climate; Data Landscapes; Early Modern Discourses of Environment and Sustainability; E-Research Approaches to Historic Weather Data; Environmental Change in Pre-History; Learning to Live with Water; Local places, global processes; Reflecting on environmental change; Spectacular environmentalisms; The cultural framing of environmental discourse; Values of environmental writing. For further information, see: http://www.landscape.ac.uk/landscape/research/researchingenvironmentalchange/researchingenvironmentalchangenetworks.aspx.
2. Goodbody’s working paper on Frame Analysis discusses Erving Goffman’s Frame Analysis: An essay on the organization of experience, Gregory Bateson’s use of frame in Steps to an Ecology of Mind, Lakoff and Johnson’s Metaphors We Live By, John Dryzek’s. The Politics of the Earth, and Mike Hulme’s Why We Disagree About Climate Change, amongst others, to illustrate a range of frame-based methodologies and applications in social research-related areas. See cfoed.co.uk for this and other working papers.
3. It concludes with recommendations for engaging in the production of a ‘brighter narrative’, ‘constructed from peoples’ lives and the resilience of their households and communities, rather than simply from their performance in consumer markets that are often transitory and unstable’ (Redclift Citation2011, 164).