Communications Research

The Communications Research aimed to understand how different potential audiences of the project’s findings think about and perceive information about water quality and quantity in Georgia and Florida. This research experimented with several communication methods and tested their ability to enable audiences to understand and learn about water in a region where residents highly value both agricultural products and natural areas.

Key Findings

  • Farmers and environmentalists agree on many aspects of water issues.
  • Individuals’ water beliefs may contradict their perceptions of scientific findings.
  • This communication problem likely exists at broad geographic scales.
  • Water policy may become increasingly partisan absent intervening measures.
  • Specific water topics are identified on which the public is not well informed.
  • Without intervening measures, regional water policy could become increasingly polarized along partisan lines.
  • Farmers and environmental professionals have strong emotional connections to the nature and the outdoors, when nature includes the managed farmland.
  • Farmers and environmental professionals all see themselves as stewards of their environment, but their goals are different and they disagree on which land practices are considered sustainable.
  • Farmers and environmental professionals have different cultural worldviews and life experiences, which affect how they understand their relationship to nature.
  • As a science communication format, deliberative dialogue encourages appreciation for complexity and facilitates perspective-taking -- potentially even if those perspectives are not physically represented among participants.
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Publications

  • Cooper, N. A., & Monroe, M. C. (2021). Water quality in the Floridan Aquifer Region: FOR371/FR440, 12/2021. EDIS2021(6). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fr440-2021
  • Hundemer, S. (2021). Confronting water partisanship with communication strategy [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. School of Forest, Fisheries, & Geomatics Sciences, University of Florida. https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UFE0057704/00001/pdf
  • Hundemer, S. (2021). Replication data for the water science communication problem. [Data set]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/U3DMHO
  • Hundemer, S., & Monroe, M. C. (2020). A co-orientation analysis of producers’ and environmentalists’ mental models of water issues: opportunities for improved communication and collaboration. Environmental Communication, 15(3), 320-338. https://doi.org/10.1080/17524032.2020.1828128
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024a). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 1—what do people know about water science? AEC786/WC447, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc447-2024
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024b). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 2—do people believe water science? AEC781/WC442, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc442-2024
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024c). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 3— how the right messages and messengers can increase bipartisan support for water policy: AEC778/WC439, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc439-2024
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024d). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 4—the media’s role in water perceptions: AEC782/WC443, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc443-2024
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024e). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 5—increasing collaboration between producers and environmentalists on water challenges: AEC788/WC449, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc449-2024
  • Hundemer, S., & Ramadan, S. (2024f). Communicating about water in the Floridan Aquifer region: Part 6—stakeholders’ mental models of regional water challenges: AEC785/WC446, 3/2024. EDIS, 2024(2). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc446-2024
  • Hundemer, S., Treise, D., & Monroe, M. (2022). A scarcity of biospheric values in local and regional reporting of water issues: media coverage in the Floridan Aquifer region. Journal of Applied Communications, 106(2). https://doi.org/10.4148/1051-0834.2424
  • Hundemer, S., Monroe, M. C., & Kaplan, D. (2022). The water science communication problem: water knowledge and the acceptance or rejection of water science. Journal of Hydrology, 604. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2021.127230
  • Hundemer, S. (2022). What do Florida and Georgia residents know about water? [Informational flyer].
  • Hundemer, S., Monroe, M. C., & Adams, D. C. (2023). Building bipartisan support for pro-environmental water policy in a competitive communication environment: the effect of competing moral frames and political communicators. Journal of Hydrology, 627(Part A). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.130379
  • Monroe, M. C., & Barrett, C. (2021). Basics of agricultural BMPs in north Florida and southwest Georgia. EDIS publication #FOR368. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fr437-2021
  • Monroe, M., & Sullivan, G. (2022). Water’s Journey through natural and human systems: FOR374/FR445, 12/2021. EDIS2021(6). https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fr445-2021

Meet the team

Sadie Hundemer, University of Florida
Martha Monroe, University of Florida
Natalie Cooper, University of Florida

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