Digital Traces in Context| From “Knowledge Brokers” to Opinion Makers: How Physical Presence Affected Scientists’ Twitter Use During the COP21 Climate Change Conference

Authors

  • Stefanie Walter University of Hamburg
  • Fenja De Silva-Schmidt University of Hamburg
  • Michael Brüggemann University of Hamburg

Keywords:

science communication, social media, climate change, Twitter

Abstract

Professional norms of science have played an important role in discouraging scientists from raising their voices in public. However, they are increasingly using social media to discuss and publicize their research. This study investigates the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference summit and examines scientists’ social media use by analyzing “digital traces” that scientists left on social media during the summit. Using geolocated tweets, we compare the Twitter use of scientists who attended the conference with those who did not. Combining automated, quantitative, and qualitative content analysis, the study shows how scientists participating in the conference provided live reporting and formed a transnational network. Scientists at the conference and elsewhere engaged in political advocacy, indicating a shift toward a new pattern of hybrid science communication, which includes characteristics that have formerly been attributed to journalism and advocacy.

Author Biographies

Stefanie Walter, University of Hamburg

Ph.D.

Fenja De Silva-Schmidt, University of Hamburg

M.A.

Michael Brüggemann, University of Hamburg

Prof. Dr.

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Published

2018-01-26

Issue

Section

Special Sections