Reporting on Climate Change [1]
November 28-December 9, 2011 — SEJ's Durban Diary [2] posted news leading up to the United Nations COP17/CMP7 climate change meetings, as well as a Twitter feed throughout. The event site's news centre [3] posted coverage and press releases.
February 16, 2011 — The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media posted an excellent article, "Making the Complicated Clear: Interactive Graphics Make Data Visual," [4] on tips and tools for helping media visualize impacts of climate change, written by former CNN and CBS environmental reporter Deborah Potter, founder, president and executive director of NewsLab.org [5].
November 2010 — The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media posted a two-part series on leading climate scientists' and science journalists' "Lessons Learned" [6] from the climate change controversies of the past 12 months, such as hacked e-mails from the University of East Anglia and the IPCC's mistaken report of Himalayan glaciers melting by 2035.
November 16, 2009 — The Center for Research on Environmental Decisions (CRED) at Columbia University has published a free, research-based guide, The Psychology of Climate Change Communication, [7] for "Scientists, Journalists, Educators, Political Aides, and the Interested Public."