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Showing below up to 50 results in range #1 to #50.

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  1. A one page document to understand climate change
  2. Advanced biofuels
  3. Article
  4. As an employee or employer
  5. Bain, P. G., et al. (2016). Co-benefits of addressing climate change can motivate action around the world.
  6. Ballew, M., Goldberg, M., Rosenthal, S., Cutler, M., & Leiserowitz, A. (2019). Climate change activism among Latino and White Americans.
  7. Books
  8. Boykoff, M. T., & Boykoff, J. M. (2007). Climate change and journalistic norms: A case-study of US mass-media coverage.
  9. Brulle, R. J. (2014). Institutionalizing delay: foundation funding and the creation of U.S. climate change counter-movement organizations.
  10. Brügger, A., Dessai, S., Devine-Wright, P., Morton, T. A., & Pidgeon, N. F. (2015). Psychological responses to the proximity of climate change.
  11. Build the infrastructure that will get new technologies to market.
  12. Bulkeley, H., & Betsill, M. M. (2013). Revisiting the urban politics of climate change.
  13. Carayannis, E. G., & Campbell, D. F. (2011). Open Innovation Diplomacy and a 21st Century Fractal Research, Education and Innovation (FREIE) Ecosystem
  14. Carbon capture (both direct air capture and point capture)
  15. Change outdated policies
  16. Change the rules so new technologies can compete.
  17. Chapter 2 of The Future We Choose
  18. Chapter 3 of The Future we Choose
  19. ChatGPT's article
  20. ChatGPT's comprehensive plan
  21. Civic Engagement
  22. Civic action
  23. Clean electricity standards.
  24. Clean fuel standards.
  25. Clean product standards.
  26. Communication
  27. Consumer behaviour
  28. Cook, J., Lewandowsky, S., & Ecker, U. K. (2017). Neutralizing misinformation through inoculation: Exposing misleading argumentation techniques reduces their influence.
  29. Coolants that don’t contain F-gases
  30. Core Team's Toolkit
  31. Core Team’s Toolkit
  32. Corner, A., & Clarke, J. (2017). Talking climate: From research to practice in public engagement.
  33. Create incentives that lower costs and reduce risk.
  34. Davenport, T. H., & Kalakota, R. (2019). The potential for artificial intelligence in marketing.
  35. Drought- and flood-tolerant food crops
  36. Dunlap, R. E., McCright, A. M., & Yarosh, J. H. (2016). The political divide on climate change: Partisan polarization widens in the U.S.
  37. Earth United
  38. Electrofuels
  39. Federal Legislation
  40. Feldman, L., Hart, P. S., & Milosevic, T. (2017). Polarizing news? Representations of threat and efficacy in leading US newspapers' coverage of climate change.
  41. Geothermal energy
  42. Get informed
  43. Gifford, R., & Nilsson, A. (2014). Personal and social factors that influence pro-environmental concern and behaviour: A review.
  44. Graesser, A. C., Kuo, B. C., Lattner, A. D., & Nesbit, J. C. (2018). Advances in the science of assessment and learning with technology.
  45. Grid-scale electricity storage that can last a full season
  46. Hart, P. S., & Nisbet, E. C. (2012). Boomerang effects in science communication: How motivated reasoning and identity cues amplify opinion polarization about climate mitigation policies.
  47. Hawken, P. (Ed.). (2017). Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming.
  48. Hobson, K., & Niemeyer, S. (2013). What sceptics believe: The effects of information and deliberation on climate change scepticism.
  49. Hsu, A., Weinfurter, A., & Xu, K. (2017). Aligning subnational climate actions for the new post-Paris climate regime.
  50. Hulme, M. (2009). Why we disagree about climate change: Understanding controversy, inaction and opportunity.

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