Jim Cantrill

Professor
Communication Studies
Northern Michigan University
1401 Presque Isle
Marquette, MI 49855
Phone: (906) 227-2061
Fax: (906) 227-2071
Email: jcantril@nmu.edu
Website: www.nmu.edu/caps/Pages/faccant.html
Publications related to Conservation Psychology:
Cantrill, J. (2004). A sense of self-in-place for adaptive management, capacity building, and public participation. In S. Senecah (Ed.), Environmental Communication Yearbook I. Mahwah, NJ: Lawence Erlbaum Associates.
Cantrill, J. (2003). Distrust of government at the end of the road: Finding selves situated in a hinterland place. Communication Research Reports.
Bott, S., Cantrill, J., & Myers, Jr., E. O. (2003). Place and the promise of conservation psychology. Human Ecology Review, 10(2), 100-112.
Cantrill, J. (2002). The divisive discourse of the beartooth alliance: A community of Strangers. In M. Orbe, T. McDonald, & T. Ford-Ahmed (Eds.), Building Diverse Communities: Applications of Communication Research. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.
Cantrill, J., & Senecah, S. L. (2001). Using the 'sense of self-in-place' construct in the context of environmental policy-making and landscape planning. Environmental Science and Policy, 4(4-5), 185-203.
Cantrill, J. (2000). Sustainability and the Lake Superior binational program: An international, multi-sector initiative. In W. L. Filho (Ed.), Communicating Sustainability. Amsterdam, ND: Peter Lang Scientific.
Cantrill, J., Potter, T., & Stephenson, W. (2000). Protected Areas and Regional sustainability: Surveying decision makers in the Lake Superior basin. Natural Resources Journal.
Cantrill, J. (1998). Communication and the human dimensions of parks and protected areas on the Canadian shield. In G. Nelson and K. Van Osch (Eds.), Parks and Protected Areas in Ontario, Parks Research Forum of Ontario.
Cantrill, J. (1998). The environmental self and a sense of place: Communication foundations for regional ecosystem management. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 26, 301-318.
Cantrill, J. (1996). Gold, yellowstone, and the search for a rhetorical identity. In C. Herndle and S. Brown (Eds.), Green Culture: Rhetorical Analyses of Environmental Discourse. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Cantrill, J. (1996). Perceiving environmental discourse: The cognitive playground. In J. Cantrill and C. Oravec (Eds.), The Symbolic Earth: Discourse and Our Creation of the Environment. Lexington, KY: The University Press of Kentucky.
Cantrill, J., Masluk, M. M. (1996). Place and privilege as predictors of how the environment is described in discourse. Communication Reports.
Cantrill, J. (1993). Communication and our environment: Categorizing research in environmental advocacy. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 21, 66-95.
Cantrill, J. (1993). Environmental Advocacy: Lessons from the field of environmental communication. Journal of Corporate Environmental Strategy.
Cantrill, J. (1993). Understanding environmental advocacy: Interdisciplinary research and the role of cognition. Journal of Environmental Education, 24(1), 35-42.
Cantrill, J., Chimovitz, D. (1993). Culture, communication, and schema for environmental issues: An initial exploration. Communication Research Reports.
Research Interests:
Cognitive mediators associated with the reception and generation of environmental discourse
The role of a sense of self-in-place (SOSIP) in the process of cognitive mediators associated with the reception and generation of environmental discourse


