Welcome to the Climate Access Resource Hub. Whether you’re looking for guidance on how to craft the right message or reach out to a new audience, you’ve come to the right place. We carefully curate our collection of climate communication and engagement resources to meet your needs.
Featured Collections
Phase Out Fossil Fuel Playbooks
Climate Equity & Engagement Resources
Solutions Toolkit
The Engaging on Climate & Community Solutions Toolkit is the place to find tip sheets, case studies, campaign examples, and social science resources for engaging diverse audiences on climate solutions.
Collections
Resource Hub
You can search for information by resource type (such as polling and social science research, campaign examples, tip sheets, case studies, expert interviews or roundtable recordings) or strategic approach (specific recommendations related to framing, audiences, engagement or evaluation). A lock icon indicates exclusive resources for Climate Access members, accessible with your login.
You can also enter a specific topic or keyword into the search bar below to find the resources you need. Do you have a resource to share? Contact us
Type
- Campaign Example (130) Apply Campaign Example filter
- Case Study (13) Apply Case Study filter
- Expert Interview (11) Apply Expert Interview filter
- Polling & Social Science (1033) Apply Polling & Social Science filter
- Roundtable Recording (66) Apply Roundtable Recording filter
- Tip Sheet (78) Apply Tip Sheet filter
Strategic Approach
Publication Date
Polling & Social Science:
Reasoning about climate uncertainty
A paper on the concept of "uncertainty" and how the IPCC can improve the way it frames and communicates uncertainty about climate change.
Polling & Social Science:
Thinking beyond environmentalism
An article on why compartmentalizing environmental problems leads to inadequate solutions and why we need to re-examine how our values are shaped by society and in turn influence attitudes and behavior.
Polling & Social Science:
E&E: Covering Climate Change in the Age of Digital Media
A report on E&E Publishing's coverage of climate change and whether their model can fill the mainstream media gap.
Polling & Social Science:
Psychology & Global Climate Change: addressing a multifaceted phenomenon and set of challenges
A report on the psychological dimensions of climate change with recommendations to assist and encourage the psychology community's engagement with the issue.

Campaign Example:
Climate Solutions Story: RePower Bainbridge
"A small group of people can come together and say 'we can make a difference, we can make a change in a much more impactful way right here through our simple connections to each other.'"- Hilary Franz On Washington State's Bainbridge Island, a number of …

Campaign Example:
MyShelter Foundation: A Liter of Light
"They call me 'Solar Demi' because I've brightened up their dark homes." In Sitio Maligaya, a community outside of Metro Manila in the Philippines, many residents live in one-room houses constructed along an unused length of railroad track. Millions of peo…

Campaign Example:
RTCC: "One World" Climate Change Musical
"Perhaps music, song and dance may succeed where other methods failed." Students from the Addington Primary School in Durban performed the musical "One World" at COP17 to communicate the dangers of climate change and the need for action. "One World" is a p…
Polling & Social Science:
Another Year Goes By and We're No Closer to Solving Climate Change
A assertion that 2011's severe weather events and resounding scientific certainty have actually served to increase political polarization by energizing and radicalizing both the right and the left.
Polling & Social Science:
A reflection on the dichotomy between Americans' actual and perceived climate literacy and the need to train emerging scholars in science and risk communication in order to combat the partisan "culture war" of the climate change debate.
Polling & Social Science:
Vulnerability before adaptation: Toward transformative climate action
An editorial on how the international climate-risk conversation has shifted from vulnerability to adaptation and the implications and potential pitfalls of an adaptation frame.