Fr. 220.00

Journalism, Politics, and the Dakota Access Pipeline - Standing Rock and the Framing of Injustice

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book explores tensions surrounding news media coverage of Indigenous environmental justice issues, identifying them as a fruitful lens through which to examine the political economy of journalism, American history, human rights, and contemporary U.S. politics.


List of contents

Acknowledgements
Preface: Background and Language


  1. Introduction: Media Coverage of Standing Rock and the Dakota Access Pipeline

  2. The Dakota Access Pipeline, the Oilygarchy, and the Media: A Study in Power

  3. A Case of Un-Coverage? Deep Media, Indigenous Representation, and Environmental Issues

  4. Framing Injustice: U.S Media Coverage of the Standing Rock Movement

  5. "Could It Happen Here?" Canadian Newspaper Framing of the Dakota Access Pipeline

  6. Law and Order: from Civil Rights to Nixon to Trump, a Trope in Revival

  7. Indigenous Perspectives on the Dakota Access Pipeline, Politics, and the Media: the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and Journalists Speak

  8. Did Technology Kill the Goose that Laid the Golden Egg or Save It? New Media, Old Media, and the #NODAPL Movement
Appendix A: Standing Rock Interview Questions: "Journalism and the Dakota Access Pipeline" Project
Appendix B: Interview Questions for Mark Trahant "Journalism and the Dakota Access Pipeline" Project
Index

About the author

Ellen Moore is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Washington Tacoma, USA.

Summary

This book explores tensions surrounding news media coverage of Indigenous environmental justice issues, identifying them as a fruitful lens through which to examine the political economy of journalism, American history, human rights, and contemporary U.S. politics.

Additional text

"In this exploration of how the U.S. media covers the environment and environmental justice issues, Moore offers an insightful and compelling discussion of tensions between commercialism, journalism, and coverage of key issues that should be presented as relevant to us all. Through her examinations of our corporate-owned media, Moore presents a timely and important 'Study in Power', a meticulous, unwavering, and well-researched eye on structural weaknesses in how we receive news of our ever-increasingly vulnerable world." -- Rena Priest, Lhaq’ te’ mish author, Patriarchy Blues
"Ellen Moore provides a brilliant analysis of media coverage of the 2016 Dakota Access Pipeline protests by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and the 'water protectors' who were its supporters. Most relevantly, she documents the general failure of modern journalism to adequately cover environmental issues and the concerns of Indigenous peoples. In this effort, her work represents the very finest in communications scholarship." -- Michael L. Lawson, author of Dammed Indians Revisited: The Continuing History of the Pick-Sloan Plan and the Missouri River Sioux
"Moore’s penetrating study of the media’s response to the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s bold protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline is ultimately a profound indictment of the Fourth Estate’s unwillingness to check the greed of the fossil fuel industry or to inspire moral courage in our political leaders. Moving fluidly between first-hand accounts of Sioux leaders and illuminating lessons from the literatures on environmental justice and the political economy of the media industry, Moore reveals how the Standing Rock controversy refracts the media’s long-standing reluctance to call out environmental abuses and to shine a bright light on environmental injustices." --Heidi M. Hurd,Ross and Helen Workman Chair in Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Illinois
"Engaging and informative, this book uses the lens of media studies to expertly demonstrate how questions of environmental justice, social justice and environmental ethics are tied together in the NODAPL movement. It is a must-read for academics or general readers who are interested in how media coverage can inform our opinions and values and frame agendas in ways that have far-reaching consequences." -- Jane Compson, Associate Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington Tacoma
"Both an engaging, respectful discourse with Indigenous voices and an eviscerating critique of media's complicity in environmental degradation." --Danica Sterud Miller (Puyallup), Assistant Professor of American Indian Studies
"Moore expertly weaves through the confluence of media coverage, Big Oil, and Indigenous activism with considerable poise, in turn revealing a timely, eye-opening, and personal telling on the complexities surrounding the Dakota Access Pipeline protest and its representation throughout various media outlets." -- Miguel Douglas, Editor-in-chief of American Indian Republic

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