BeckS (2011) Moving beyond the linear model of expertise? IPCC and the test of adaptation. Regional Environmental Change11: 297–306.
2.
CastreeN (2014) The Anthropocene and geography III: future directions. Geography Compass8: 464–476.
3.
CookBRBalayannisA (2015) Co-producing (a fearful) Anthropocene. Geographical Research53: 270–279.
4.
DurantD (2015) The undead linear model of expertise. In: HeazleMKaneJ (eds) Policy Legitimacy, Science and Political Authority: Knowledge and Action in Liberal Democracies. London: Routledge, 17–38.
5.
EllisEC (2017) Physical Geography in the Anthropocene. London: SAGE Publications.
6.
HeadL (2015) The Anthropoceneans. Geographical Research53: 313–320.
7.
OwensS (2015) Knowledge, Policy, and Expertise: The UK Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution 1970–2011. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
8.
PikettyT (2018) Capital in the 21st century. In: Inequality in the 21st Century. London: Routledge.
SarewitzD (2010) Frontiers of Illusion: Science, Technology, and the Politics of Progress, Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
11.
WynneB (2006) Public engagement as a means of restoring public trust in science: hitting the notes, but missing the music?Public Health Genomics9: 211–220.