Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement

In this article, I draw on my experience as an environmental social scientist and narrative nonfiction writer conducting research in working class conservative agricultural communities that frequently challenge or reject science communication. Based on my own trial-and-error path as a public intelle...

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Main Author: Liz Carlisle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2020.00007/full
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spelling doaj-b7eacc37a61d4c8c8d484c52841db5e02020-11-25T03:53:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2020-02-01510.3389/fcomm.2020.00007488374Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental MovementLiz CarlisleIn this article, I draw on my experience as an environmental social scientist and narrative nonfiction writer conducting research in working class conservative agricultural communities that frequently challenge or reject science communication. Based on my own trial-and-error path as a public intellectual committed to advancing sustainable agriculture, I present a method that I've developed to promote broader and more diverse public dialogue about environmental problem solving. Acknowledging that people interpret the world through socially-reinforced cultural cognition and pre-existing cognitive frames—and also that humans are social animals who thrive in groups I propose that frames can be the science communicator's friend. I have yet to find a community that does not have some connection to ancestral or local knowledge about community interdependence and the importance of being a good neighbor. Indeed, I often find that these “neighborliness” frames are at the very core of people's cultural cognition. Such neighborliness frames, in turn, provide a strong foundation for environmental consciousness. Thus, by being curious about a community's unique history with and knowledge about neighborliness, science communicators can help to build up frames necessary for environmental actions, while also helping cultivate broader understandings of the “neighborhood” within which communities' values and worldviews demand action.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2020.00007/fullenvironmental communicationcultural cognitionframesenvironmental movementssocial changerural politics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liz Carlisle
spellingShingle Liz Carlisle
Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
Frontiers in Communication
environmental communication
cultural cognition
frames
environmental movements
social change
rural politics
author_facet Liz Carlisle
author_sort Liz Carlisle
title Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
title_short Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
title_full Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
title_fullStr Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
title_full_unstemmed Activating Neighborliness Frames: Drawing on Culturally-Relevant Discourses of Community to Build a Stronger and More Diverse Environmental Movement
title_sort activating neighborliness frames: drawing on culturally-relevant discourses of community to build a stronger and more diverse environmental movement
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Communication
issn 2297-900X
publishDate 2020-02-01
description In this article, I draw on my experience as an environmental social scientist and narrative nonfiction writer conducting research in working class conservative agricultural communities that frequently challenge or reject science communication. Based on my own trial-and-error path as a public intellectual committed to advancing sustainable agriculture, I present a method that I've developed to promote broader and more diverse public dialogue about environmental problem solving. Acknowledging that people interpret the world through socially-reinforced cultural cognition and pre-existing cognitive frames—and also that humans are social animals who thrive in groups I propose that frames can be the science communicator's friend. I have yet to find a community that does not have some connection to ancestral or local knowledge about community interdependence and the importance of being a good neighbor. Indeed, I often find that these “neighborliness” frames are at the very core of people's cultural cognition. Such neighborliness frames, in turn, provide a strong foundation for environmental consciousness. Thus, by being curious about a community's unique history with and knowledge about neighborliness, science communicators can help to build up frames necessary for environmental actions, while also helping cultivate broader understandings of the “neighborhood” within which communities' values and worldviews demand action.
topic environmental communication
cultural cognition
frames
environmental movements
social change
rural politics
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fcomm.2020.00007/full
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