Fr. 58.90

Environmental Conflict and the Media

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Has the hype associated with the «revolutionary» potential of the World Wide Web and digital media for environmental activism been muted by the past two decades of lived experience? What are the empirical realities of the prevailing media landscape?
Using a range of related disciplinary perspectives, the contributors to this book analyze and explain the complicated relationship between environmental conflict and the media. They shine light on why media are central to historical and contemporary conceptions of power and politics in the context of local, national and global issues and outline the emerging mixture of innovation and reliance on established strategies in environmental campaigns.
With cases drawn from different sections of the globe - Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Europe, Latin America, China, Japan, the Pacific Islands, Africa - the book demonstrates how conflicts emanate from and flow across multiple sites, regions and media platforms and examines the role of the media in helping to structure collective discussion, debate and decision-making.

List of contents

Contents: Michael Meadows/Robert Thomson: Campaigning Journalism: The Early Press, Environmental Advocacy and National Parks - Alex Lockwood: Affecting Environments: Mobilizing Emotion and Twitter in the UK Save Our Forests Campaign - Catherine Collins: Clear Cuts on Clearcutting: YouTube, Activist Videos and Narrative Strategies - Daniel Palmer: Photography, Technology, and Ecological Criticism: Beyond the Sublime Image of Disaster - Lyn McGaurr: Not So Soft? Travel Journalism, Environmental Protest, Power and the Internet - Silvio Waisbord: Contesting Extractivism: Media and Environmental Citizenship in Latin America - Kitty van Vuuren: Online Media, Flak and Local Environmental Politics - Dan Brockington: Celebrity, Environmentalism and Conservation - Michelle Voyer/Tanja Dreher/William Gladstone/Heather Goodall: Dodgy Science or Global Necessity? Local Media Reporting of Marine Parks - Morgan Richards: Greening Wildlife Documentary - Myra Gurney: Whither the «Moral Imperative»? The Focus and Framing of Political Rhetoric in the Climate Change Debate in Australia - Kumi Kato: As Fukushima Unfolds: Media Meltdown and Public Empowerment - Clio Kenterelidou: Public Communication, Environmental Crises and Nuclear Disasters: A Comparative Approach - Robert Cox: Climate Change, Media Convergence and Public Uncertainty - Chris Nash/Wendy Bacon: «That Sinking Feeling»: Climate Change, Journalism and Small Island States - Alanna Myers: «Skeptics» and «Believers»: The Anti-Elite Rhetoric of Climate Change Skepticism in the Media - Guobin Yang/Craig Calhoun: Media, Civil Society and the Rise of a Green Public Sphere in China.

About the author










Libby Lester (PhD, University of Melbourne) is Professor of Journalism, Media and Communications at the University of Tasmania. She is the author of Media and Environment: Conflict, Politics and the News (2010) and co-editor with Simon Cottle of Transnational Protests and the Media (Peter Lang, 2011). Her research has appeared in Media, Culture & Society, International Journal of Communication, Journalism, Journalism Studies and Media International Australia. She has also worked as a journalist for leading Australian newspapers and magazines.
Brett Hutchins (PhD, University of Queensland) is Associate Professor and Co-Director of the Research Unit in Media Studies at Monash University. His most recent articles appear in Media, Culture & Society, Information, Communication & Society, International Journal of Communication and Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism. His books include Sport Beyond Television: The Internet, Digital Media and the Rise of Networked Media Sport (2012).

Summary

Has the hype associated with the "revolutionary" potential of the World Wide Web and digital media for environmental activism been muted by the past two decades of lived experience? What are the empirical realities of the prevailing media landscape? This book analyzes and explains the relationship between environmental conflict and the media.

Product details

Assisted by Hutchins (Editor), Bret Hutchins (Editor), Brett Hutchins (Editor), Lester (Editor), Lester (Editor), Libby Lester (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2013
 
EAN 9781433118920
ISBN 978-1-4331-1892-0
No. of pages 357
Dimensions 150 mm x 19 mm x 225 mm
Weight 520 g
Series Global Crises and the Media
Global Crises and the Media
Subjects Guides > Law, job, finance > Letters, rhetoric
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Miscellaneous

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