Colliding stories; how discourses in ocean acidification are subsumed in climate change

Like climate change, ocean acidification is a globally complex problem caused by increasing atmospheric CO2 as a result of human consequences from carbon intensive social practices. Using inductive discourse methods and thematic analysis, this study examines the complex interplay of social ideas using Hajer’s storyline framework as the method of choice to draw comparisons between narrative features in ocean acidification and climate change discourses and identifies whether ocean acidification is characterised together or separately from climate change as a result of new storylines. Any separation may not only benefit ocean acidification but may also alter the current resolution pathway for climate change. Interview research drives emergent narrative themes which are configured using data coding categories. The number of categories is limited partly by design to make it easier to interpret and analyse interview participant viewpoints and their corresponding storylines. Narratives are contextualised into three emergent themes with focus on political, technological and social pathways, with particular focus on storylines that are energised and routinised by participants through social everyday practice.

Paddon M., 2013. Colliding stories; how discourses in ocean acidification are subsumed in climate change. MSc thesis, Climate Change Management, Birkbeck College, University of London. Thesis.


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