At Big Think, Thoughts on Political Communication & Science

Back in July, I sat down for an hour long interview with the new TED-like social media site Big Think. The innovative project features "hundreds of hours of direct, unfiltered interviews with today's leading thinkers" segmented by topic category and spliced into 3 to 4 minute conversations.

The general focus of the interview was on the nature of strategic communication with an emphasis on science and environmental topics. Big Think has organized the conversations into 11 different sections. I link to several of these below with the description from the site. The themes will be familiar to readers who have followed the Framing Science debate and how it applies to this year's election or science politics generally.

Public Relations for Science
The same concepts that apply to a political campaign also work when communicating science explains Matthew Nisbet.


Wagging the Dog: Media and Public Policy

Matthew Nisbet emphasizes the cyclical nature of the relationship between public policy and media.

Barack Obama as a Master Communicator
Matthew Nisbet explains Obama's appeal.

The Pros and Cons of Richard Dawkins
Matthew Nisbet walks a fine line in the age-old debate between religion and science.

Explaining the Paradigm Sheep
Matthew Nisbet explains an article that documents the history of a paradigm shift in the public relationship to science.

Studying Audience Behavior
New campaigns often use the same techniques to communicate, however Matthew Nisbet points out that this involves more than simplification

Crisis Communication 101
PR advice to politicians from expert Matthew Nisbet.

Outlining Successful Strategies
The best communicators focus on motivation, emotion, and framing, explains Matthew Nisbet.

Balancing Education and Entertainment
Matthew Nisbet says campaigns must first garner attention, then deliver useful information.

The Think Big blog also has these two posts about the interviews.

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