FIND RESOURCES
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 need
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:
Transforming Behaviour Change: Beyond Nudge and Neuromania
A report on the relationship between neuroscience, behavior change, and society that examines how self-awareness and decision making shape our environment. Dr. Jonathan Rowson, head of the RSA Social Brain Project, asserts that addressing the major collec…
Polling & Social Science:
Cabbies, Costs and Climate Change: An engaged approach to fuel efficient behaviour
A study of how positive behavior change can become habitual and "contagious" across a group, through an investigation of taxi drivers' fuel efficiency in response to gas prices and climate change.
Polling & Social Science:
A Rose by Any Other Name..? What Members of the General Public Prefer to Call “Climate Change.”
A study of public preferences for the terms "global warming," "climate change," and "global climate change" based on respondents' characteristics, beliefs, political affiliation, and segmentation from the Global Warming's Six Americas research.
Polling & Social Science:
Why Isn’t There a More Massive, Activist Climate Movement?
An opinion piece about the state of the climate movement that outlines four reasons behind the disconnect that exists between the urgency of the climate crisis and the public's response.

Tip Sheet:
Tip Sheet: The Heath Brothers’ 5 Rules for Compelling Presentations
A summary of Chip Heath and Dan Heath's five rules to developing effective presentations and avoiding common pitfalls.

Polling & Social Science:
A guide to the cognitive processes related to public misperceptions, including practical tips to debunking climate change myths and misinformation.
Polling & Social Science:
For many, climate is an issue of faith
A media packet on faith-based climate advocacy as a moral and spiritual issue in regard to stewardship and aid to vulnerable populations, including statements from faith communities, a message from the Vatican in response to COP17, and recommended resour…
Polling & Social Science:
Making Your Presentation Stick
A short manual on the five basic communication rules that govern successful presentations, with examples from the book Made to Stick.
Polling & Social Science:
Public Misperceptions and Effective Behaviors
Research on how people's interaction with technology and nature influences perceptions of energy consumption and the ease of adopting effective behaviors.
Polling & Social Science:
Psychology Underpinnings of Environmental Decision Making
An experiment to study social norms around desert landscaping to understand how and why people make decisions and adopt new behavior change when attitudes and behaviors do not necessarily correspond.