The Mediated Climate puts the status quo on notice. By scrutinizing the intersections between climate change and information ecosystems, the book shows that this is a social, political, cultural, technological, and existential set of intersecting challenges we must bravely address now. -- Max Boykoff, author of Creative (Climate) Communications: Productive Pathways for Science, Policy and Society A brilliant, sharp, and original book on how we talk about climate change, and what a difference that might make for our collective future. Change begins with words, and Russell presents an inspiring call for journalists and citizens to lead it. -- Zizi Papacharissi, author of After Democracy: Imagining Our Political Future As any journalist can tell you: the climate crisis is a communication crisis. Russell provides an honest reflection on the ways journalism has been part of the problem, as well as a necessary part of the solution. -- Phaedra C. Pezzullo, author of Beyond Straw Men: Plastic Pollution and Networked Cultures of Care The Mediated Climate is the most comprehensive analysis to date of the intersection of the climate and information crises. Adrienne Russell expertly examines how climate discourses are created and negotiated in a polluted information environment. This book presents inspiring successes for anyone who is engaged in reclaiming our mediated spaces. -- Bruno Takahashi, coeditor of The Handbook of International Trends in Environmental Communication Russell provides a comprehensive analysis of the intersection of the climate and the information crises and thereby shows how the climate crisis is also a communication crisis. * Journalism * Recommended. * Choice Reviews * The Mediated Climate is a fantastic read for any scientist, journalist, or activist navigating the murky waters of climate change communication. It is also an effective summary for new students who will benefit from learning what climate change journalism has accomplished in the last forty years, and where it is going next. * H-Environment, H-Net Reviews * Contributes significantly to the ongoing scholarly discourse on climate change. It is an ideal resource for climate journalists and activists, policy makers, media scholars interested in the medias role in environmental justice, and anyone any environmentally minded reader. * LSE Review of Books * By paying attention to the literal and figurative wildfires raging in the United States over what constitutes the public good and who gets to define freedom, Russell describes the fight for climate and information justice as part of a longer continuum of collective struggle against the tyrannies of unfettered power. * International Journal of Communication *