Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Annual Meeting App
Onsite Guide
This session includes work on environmental values, culture, knowledge and politics in various empirical contexts. Research featured in this session considers how practical experience and religion shape environmental attitudes, how farmers construct environmental expertise, gendered judgments of natural beauty, and the dynamics of partisan divisions over energy policy.
Becoming Connected with Nature: Developing the Practice of Connecting with Nature through Practical Bricolage - Tyler J. Bateman, University of New Mexico
Knowledge Co-Construction Strategies Among Agroecology Farmers - Águeda Ortega, University of Texas-Austin
Masculine and Feminine Natures: How Gender Shapes the Aesthetics of the Environment - Andrew McCumber, Virginia Tech; Heather Lynch; Tristan Bridges, University of California-Santa Barbara
Religious Residue Stops at Oil Spills: Religious Socialization Has Limited Effects on Adult Environmental Attitudes - Frederic Traylor, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
From Climate to Economy: Priorities and Representation in U.S. Senate Energy Policy Hearings, 2000 – 2021 - Mircea Gherghina, Brown University