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Mots. Les langages du politique, n°127/2021

Mots. Les langages du politique, n°127/2021

Discours climatosceptiques

Edited by Albin Wagener, Renaud Hourcade, Christian Le Bart, Camille Noûs

Mots. Les langages du politique



Discourses on climate denialism

In recent decades, as alarming evidence of anthropogenic global warming has accumulated, some conservative groups have continued to endorse or support sceptical discourses structured by the contestation of science and radical opposition to the dominant climate agenda. Issue 127 of the review Mots explores the enduring presence of climate change-denying messages across a variety of discourse topics with a view to shedding light on this surprising capacity for resilience. Whether linked to the Brexit campaign in the United Kingdom, covered in the francophone written press, echoed in anti-vegan discourse on social networks or reframed through the promotion of technological solutions, the articles gathered in this issue show how climate sceptical discourses have become instilled in a variety of conservative topics, and that they are finally managing to maintain their presence in the social debate.

Camille Noûs
lien IdRef : 249647966

Contributions:

Chloé Gaboriaux, Camille Noûs
Mots. Les langages du politique, n°126/2021
Le travail et ses maux
Work and its evils
This dossier brings together contributions dealing with words at work. Coming from political science, sociology, anthropology or information and communication sciences, the authors examine the way in which the neo-managerial discourse is conveyed and imposed by private and public sector executives and the way in which employees respond to it.



Tracés, Camille Noûs
Tracés, n°39/2020
Documenter l'université qui lutte
Documenting the struggling university
2020 was a special year in many ways: Covid-19, but also the strong mobilization against the Research Programming Law in France. It was important for us to make a mobilized issue that would report on what happened during this unusual year.



Annabelle Allouch, Camille Noûs, Nicolas Rabain, Christelle Rabier, Clémentine Vidal-Naquet
Tracés, n°38/2020
Angoisse
Anxiety
While anxiety as a category is abundantly mobilized to designate a bodily sensation of malaise peculiar to the individual, this issue of Traces proposes to examine anxiety as a regime of experience in the face of uncertainty, using the tools no longer of psychoanalysis but of the human and social sciences.



Juliette Galonnier, Stéphane Le Courant, Camille Noûs, Anthony Pecqueux
Tracés, hors-série 2019
Les sciences humaines et sociales au travail (II): Que faire des données de la recherche ?
Social sciences and humanities at work (II): The politics of research data
Faced with a number of contradictory injunctions, researchers have engaged in controversies and debates. Given the many questions and concerns that the current "data moment" provokes, this special issue proposes to take a step back and reflect on our trade and practices.