Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research (ROGER)

The Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research, or ROGER, is a near-exhaustive collection of bibliographic information, abstracts, and links to many of journal articles that pertain to shale and tight gas development. The goal of this project is to create a single repository for unconventional oil and gas-related research as a resource for academic, scientific, and citizen researchers.

ROGER currently includes 2303 studies.
Last updated: July 27, 2024

ROGER

Search ROGER

Use keywords or categories (e.g., air quality, climate, health) to identify peer-reviewed studies and view study abstracts.

How do U.S. state residents form opinions about ‘fracking’ in social contexts? A multilevel analysis
Howell et al., July 2017
Concern and counter-concern: The challenge of fragmented fears for the reguation of hydraulic fracturing
John Pearson and Gary Lynch-Wood, July 2017
Emphasis Framing and the Role of Perceived Knowledge: A Survey Experiment
Justin B. Bullock and Arnold Vedlitz, July 2017
Public parks usage near hydraulic fracturing operations
Kellison et al., June 2017
Costs, benefits, and the malleability of public support for “Fracking”
Christenson et al., June 2017
Sources and Framing of Fracking: A Content Analysis of Newspaper Coverage in North Carolina, New York, and Pennsylvania
Kylah J. Hedding, May 2017
Deliberating the perceived risks, benefits, and societal implications of shale gas and oil extraction by hydraulic fracturing in the US and UK
Thomas et al., April 2017
Public perception: Distrust for fracking
Philip Macnaghten, April 2017
Unpacking the intensity of policy conflict: a study of Colorado’s oil and gas subsystem
Tanya Heikkila and Christopher M. Weible, March 2017
Attitudes Toward “Fracking”: Perceived and Actual Geographic Proximity
Alcorn et al., March 2017
Does Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Extraction Affect How Much Youth in Rural Pennsylvania Like Their Community?
McLaughlin et al., March 2017
Exploring perceptions of fracking and environmental health in a 3-county population in South Texas
Whitworth et al., February 2017
Does It Really Make a Fracking Difference? The Conditional Effects of Question Wording on Support for Hydraulic Fracturing
Kromer et al., January 2017
Resilient but not sustainable? Public perceptions of shale gas development via hydraulic fracturing
Evensen et al., January 2017
The Home Rule Advantage: Motives and Outcomes of Local Anti-fracking Mobilization
Amanda Buday, January 2017
Response to ‘Word choice as political speech’: Hydraulic fracturing is a partisan issue
Jill E. Hopke and Molly Simis, January 2017
Social perception of unconventional gas extraction on the outskirts of a former coal-mining area in Northeast France
Gunzburger et al., January 2017
Seeing futures now: Emergent US and UK views on shale development, climate change and energy systems
Partridge et al., January 2017
Framing fracking: scale-shifting and greenwashing risk in the oil and gas industry
Stephen J. Scanlan, July 2024
Free market ideology and deregulation in Colorado's oil fields: Evidence for triple movement activism?
Malin et al., July 2024
'If they only knew what I know': Attitude change from education about 'fracking'
Darrick Evensen, July 2024
Variation in beliefs about ‘fracking’ between the UK and US
Evensen et al., July 2024
‘Fracking’: Promoter and destroyer of ‘the good life’
Darrick Evensen and Rich Stedman, July 2024
Environmental health risk perception of hydraulic fracturing in the US
Olawoyin et al., December 2016
Troubling Water: Shale Energy and Waterscape Transformation in a North American Extraction Zone
Anna J. Willow, December 2016
Normative diversity, conflict and transition: Shale gas in the Netherlands
Cuppen et al., November 2016
Hydraulic fracturing: Assessing self-reported familiarity and the contributions of selected sources to self-reported knowledge
Gene L. Theodori and Colter Ellis, November 2016
Shale Gas Governance in the United Kingdom and the United States: Opportunities for Public Participation and the Implications for Social Justice
Whitton et al., November 2016
Determinants of Pro-Fracking Measure Adoption by New York Southern Tier Municipalities
Gwen Arnold and Kaubin Wosti Neupane, November 2016
Exploring support for shale gas extraction in the United Kingdom
Andersson-Hudson et al., November 2016
Whose Backyard and What’s at Issue? Spatial and Ideological Dynamics of Local Opposition to Fracking in New York State, 2010 to 2013
Fedor A. Dokshin, October 2016
Green Narratives How Affective Responses to Media Messages Influence Risk Perceptions and Policy Preferences About Environmental Hazards
Kathryn E. Cooper and Erik C. Nisbet, October 2016
Unconventional risks: The experience of acute energy development in the Eagle Ford Shale
Ellis et al., October 2016
How geographic distance and political ideology interact to influence public perception of unconventional oil/natural gas development
Clarke et al., October 2016
Comparative Analysis of Hydraulic Fracturing Wastewater Practices in Unconventional Shale Development: Newspaper Coverage of Stakeholder Concerns and Social License to Operate
Gehman et al., September 2016
Mitigating Mistrust? Participation and Expertise in Hydraulic Fracturing Governance
Kate J. Neville and Erika Weinthal, September 2016
National Media Coverage of Hydraulic Fracturing in the United States: Evaluation Using Human and Automated Coding Techniques
Blair et al., September 2016
Exploring the intersections between local knowledge and environmental regulation: a study of shale gas extraction in Texas and Lancashire
Yasminah Beebeejaun, August 2016
Drivers for Policy Agreement in Nascent Subsystems: An Application of the Advocacy Coalition Framework to Fracking Policy in Switzerland and the UK
Ingold et al., August 2016
Social Networks and Policy Entrepreneurship: How Relationships Shape Municipal Decision Making about High-Volume Hydraulic Fracturing
Arnold et al., August 2016
Attitudes toward shale oil development in western North Dakota: The role of place based community values in attitude formation
Felix N. Fernando and Dennis R. Cooley, August 2016
Scaling up site disputes: strategies to redefine ‘local’ in the fight against fracking
Kate J. Neville and Erika Weinthal, July 2016
The effect of industry activities on public support for ‘fracking’
Boudet et al., July 2016
Risk and benefits in a fracking boom: Evidence from Colorado
Adam Mayer, July 2016
New rig on the block: spatial policy discourse and the new suburban geography of energy production on Colorado's Front Range
Adrianne Kroepsch, May 2016
Drilling Is Just the Beginning: Romanticizing Rust Belt identities in the campaign for shale gas
Jessica L. Rich, May 2016
Translocal anti-fracking activism: an exploration of network structure and tie content
Jill E. Hopke, May 2016
Dynamic Discourse Coalitions on hydro-fracking in Europe and the United States
Tamara Metze and Jennifer Dodge, May 2016
Comparing the Politics of Hydraulic Fracturing in New York, Colorado, and Texas
Christopher M. Weible and Tanya Heikkila, May 2016
Attitudes toward hydraulic fracturing: The opposing forces of political conservatism and basic knowledge about fracking
Choma et al., May 2016

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