
A student-led local Princeton Climate Strike took place in Hinds Plaza in Princeton, NJ on September 20 as part of the “Global Climate Strike.” (Photos by Bumper DeJesus)
Nov. 19, 2019
“Our new research showed that the carbon footprints of those communicating the science not only affects their credibility, but also affects audience support for the public policies for which the communicators advocated,” said Weber.
Read the full article, as covered by Forbes, here.
Plus:
- Andlinger Center interview with Elke Weber: https://acee.princeton.edu/acee-news/andlinger-center-speaks-why-the-messenger-matters-in-climate-action/
- The online version of the related research article, "Climate change communicators’ carbon footprints affect their audience’s policy support" can be found at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-019-02463-0