Cox | Environmental Communication | Buch | 978-1-4739-0252-7 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 1704 Seiten, Format (B × H): 168 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 3107 g

Reihe: SAGE Benchmarks in Communication

Cox

Environmental Communication


Four-Volume Set Auflage
ISBN: 978-1-4739-0252-7
Verlag: Sage Publications

Buch, Englisch, 1704 Seiten, Format (B × H): 168 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 3107 g

Reihe: SAGE Benchmarks in Communication

ISBN: 978-1-4739-0252-7
Verlag: Sage Publications


Environmental communication is a rapidly expanding field of study, encompassing a wide range of topics such as social-discursive constructions of “nature,” journalism and media coverage of the environment, climate change communication, analyses of environmental rhetoric, public participation in environmental decisions and environmental risk communication to name but a few.

This Major Work draws on a wide and varied range of sources to construct a comprehensive overview of the key issues in this fast-developing and highly topical area of research.

Volume One: Origins, Approaches and Principles

Volume Two: Media and Environmental Journalism

Volume Three: Environmental Risk and Climate Change Communication

Volume Four: Environmental Publics: Citizens, Corporations and Non-Governmental Organizations

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VOLUME ONE: ORIGINS, APPROACHES, AND PRINCIPLES
Part One: Theoretical and Conceptual Influences
Ideas of Nature - Raymond Williams
The Production and Consumption of Environmental Meanings in the Mass Media: A Research Agenda for the 1990s - Jacquelin Burgess
Nature and Norm - Neil Evernden
The Theoretical Construction of Nature: A Critique of Naturalistic Theories of Evolution - Klaus Eder
Part Two: Rhetorical-Discursive Analyses
Rhetorical Studies
John Muir, Yosemite, and the Sublime Response: A Study in the Rhetoric of Preservationism - Christine Oravec
Accidental Rhetoric: The Root Metaphors of Three Mile Island - Thomas Farrell and G. Thomas Goodnight
Rhetoric, Environmentalism, and Environmental Ethics - Michael Bruner and Max Oelschlaeger
Discourse Analyses
Making Sense of Earth’s Politics: A Discourse Approach - John Dryzek
Cultural Circuits of Climate Change in UK Broadsheet Newspapers - Anabela Carvalho and Jacquelin Burgess
Part Three: Social-Cultural Constructions
Constructing a Social Problem: The Press and the Environment - A. Clay Schoenfeld, Robert Meier and Robert Griffin
The Media and the Social Construction of the Environment - Anders Hansen
Media Images and the Social Construction of Reality - William Gamson, David Croteau, William Hoynes and Theodore Sasson
Rethinking Nature and Society - Phil Macnaghten and John Urry
Part Four: Visual Constructions of Environment
The Tourist Gaze and the ‘Environment’ - John Urry
Visually Branding the Environment: Climate Change as a Marketing Opportunity - Anders Hansen and David Machin
Picturing the Clima(c)tic: Greenpeace and the Representational Politics of Climate Change Communication - Julie Doyle
Part Five: Environment Communication as a Field
Communication, Media and Environment: Towards Reconnecting Research on the Production, Content and Social Implications of Environmental Communication - Anders Hansen
Nature’s ‘Crisis Disciplines’: Does Environmental Communication Have an Ethical Duty? - Robert Cox
VOLUME TWO: MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISM
Part One: News Coverage of the Environment
Up and Down with Ecology – The ‘Issue-Attention Cycle’ - Anthony Downs
Media Coverage and Public Opinion on Scientific Controversies - Allan Mazur
Part Two: Media Framing and the Environment
Framing: Toward Clarification of a Fractured Paradigm - Robert Entman
Media Discourse and Public Opinion on Nuclear Power: A Constructionist Approach - William Gamson and Andre Modigliani
Communicating Climate Change: Why Frames Matter for Public Engagement - Matthew Nisbet
Part Three: Environmental Media Effects
Agenda-Setting
The Agenda-setting Function of Mass Media - Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw
Media Agenda-setting with Environmental Issues - Tony Atwater, Michael Salwen and Ronald Anderson
The Media Coverage and Public Awareness of Environmental Issues in Japan - Shunji Mikami, Toshio Takeshita, Makoto Nakada and Miki Kawabata
A Longitudinal Study of Agenda Setting for the Issue of Environmental Pollution - Christine Ader
Mass-media Coverage, Its Influence on Public Awareness of Climate-Change Issues, and Implications for Japan's National Campaign to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions - Yuki Sampei and Midori Aoyagi-Usui
Cultivation and Narrative Analyses
Green or Brown? Television and the Cultivation of Environmental Concern - James Shanahan, Michael Morgan and Mads Stenbjerre
Environmental Concern, Patterns of Television Viewing, and Pro-Environmental Behaviors: Integrating Models of Media Consumption and Effects - R. Lance Holbert, Nojin Kwak and Dhavan Shah
Telling Stories about Global Climate Change: Measuring the Impact of Narratives on Issue Cycles - Katherine McComas and James Shanahan
Part Four: Environmental Television and Film
Television's Portrayal of the Environment: 1991–1995 - James Shanahan and Katherine McComas
Environmental Content in Prime-Time Network TV's Non-News Entertainment and Fictional Programs - Katherine McComas, James Shanahan and Jessica Butler
Hollywood Utopia: Ecology, and Contemporary American Cinema - Pat Brereton
Domesticating Nature on the Television Set - Gregg Mitman
‘Movements that are Drawn’: A History of Environmental Animation from The Lorax to FernGully to Avatar - Nicole Starosielski
Part Five:New Media, Digital Technologies, and the Environment
From Public Sphere to Public Screen: Democracy, Activism, and the "Violence" of Seattle - Kevin DeLuca and Jennifer Peeples
Power Games: Environmental Protest, News Media and the Internet - Libby Lester and Brett Hutchins
Social Media and the Organization of Collective Action: Using Twitter to Explore the Ecologies of Two Climate Change Protests - Alexandra Segerberg and W. Lance Bennett
VOLUME THREE: ENVIRONMENTAL RISK AND CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION
Part One: Environmental Risk Communication
Social-Discursive Constructions of Risks
Perception of Risk - Paul Slovic
The Emergence of Risk Communication Studies: Social and Political Context - Alonzo Plough and Sheldon Krimsky
The Social Amplification of Risk: A Conceptual Framework - Roger Kasperson, Ortwin Renn, Paul Slovic, Halina Brown, Jacque Emel, Robert Goble, Jeanne Kasperson and Samuel Ratick
From Industrial Society to the Risk Society: Questions of Survival, Social Structure and Ecological Enlightenment - Ulrich Beck
Environmental Risk and the Public
Risk Communication: Facing Public Outrage - Peter Sandman
On the Logic of Wealth Distribution and Risk Distribution - Ulrich Beck
American Risk Perceptions: Is Climate Change Dangerous? - Anthony Leiserowitz
Media and Environmental Risk
Network Evening News Coverage of Environmental Risk - Michael Greenberg, David Sachsman, Peter Sandman and Kandice Salomone
TV News, Lay Voices, and the Visualization of Environmental Risks - Simon Cottle
Part Two: Climate Change Communication
Communicating Climate Change
Climate Change Risk Perception and Policy Preferences: The Role of Affect, Imagery, and Values - Anthony Leiserowitz
More Bad News: The Risk of Neglecting Emotional Responses to Climate Change Information - Susanne Moser
‘Fear Won't Do It’: Promoting Positive Engagement with Climate Change through Visual and Iconic Representations - Saffron O'Neill and Sophie Nicholson-Cole
Beyond Frames: Recovering the Strategic in Climate Communication - Robert Cox
Media and Climate Change
Constructing Climate Change: Claims and Frames in US News Coverage of an Environmental Issue - Craig Trumbo
Balance as Bias: Global Warming and the US Prestige Press - Maxwell Boykoff and Jules Boykoff
Ideological Cultures and Media Discourses on Scientific Knowledge: Re-reading News on Climate Change - Anabela Carvalho
Lost in Translation? United States Television News Coverage of Anthropogenic Climate Change, 1995–2004 - Maxwell Boykoff
Visualizing Climate Change: Television News and Ecological Citizenship - Libby Lester and Simon Cottle
Communication and Climate Change Denial
Defeating Kyoto: The Conservative Movement's Impact on U.S. Climate Change Policy - Aaron McCright and Riley Dunlap
Testing Public (Un)Certainty of Science: Media Representations of Global Warming - Julia Corbett and Jessica Durfee
VOLUME FOUR: ENVIRONMENTAL PUBLICS: CITIZENS, CORPORATIONS, AND NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
Part One: Public Participation in Environmental Decisions
Environmental Communication and the Cultural Politics of Environmental Citizenship - Jacquie Burgess, Carolyn Harrison and P. Filius
Citizen Participation and Environmental Risk: A Survey of Institutional Mechanisms - Daniel Fiorino
Collaboration as a Deliberative Process - Steven Daniels and Gregg Walker
The Environmental Self and a Sense of Place: Communication Foundations for Regional Ecosystem Management - James Cantrill
The Trinity of Voice: The Role of Practical Theory in Planning and Evaluating the Effectiveness of Environmental Participatory Processes - Susan Senecah
Part Two: Communication of Environmental Pressure Groups and NGOs
Environment Groups’ Uses of Media
Source Strategies and the Communication of Environmental Affairs - Susan Senecah
Imaging Social Movements - Kevin DeLuca
Environmental Protest and Tap-Dancing with the Media in the Information Age - Brett Hutchins and Libby Lester
Making the News: Movement Organizations, Media Attention, and the Public Agenda - Kenneth Andrews and Neal Caren
Rhetorical and Discursive Studies of Environmental Sources
Conservationism vs. Preservationism: The “Public Interest” in the Hetch Hetchy Controversy - Christine Oravec
Introduction to Toxic Tourism: A Challenge - Phaedra Pezzullo
Environmental Melodrama - Steven Schwarze
A Two-Step Flow of Influence? Opinion-Leader Campaigns on Climate Change - Matthew Nisbet and John Kotcher
Resisting ‘National Breast Cancer Awareness Month’: The Rhetoric of Counterpublics and Their Cultural Performances - Phaedra Pezzullo
Part Three: Corporate Green Marketing and Public Relations
Environmental Advertising
Anatomy of Green Advertising - Easwar Iyer and Bobby Banerjee
Shades of Green: A Multidimensional Analysis of Environmental Advertising - Subhabrata Banerjee, Charles Gulas and Easwar Iyer
Environmental Advertising Claims: A Preliminary Investigation - Norman Kangun, Les Carlson and Stephen Grove
Corporate “Green” Image Management
Corporate Publics and Rhetorical Strategies: The Case of Union Carbide's Bhopal Crisis - Richard Ice
Constructing the Environmental Spectacle: Green Advertisements and the Greening of the Corporate Image, 1910–1990 - Michael Howlett and Rebecca Raglon
Image Repair Discourse and Crisis Communication - William Benoit
Spinning Climate Change: Corporate and NGO Public Relations Strategies in Canada and the United States - Josh Greenberg, Graham Knight and Elizabeth Westersund


Cox, Robert
Robert Cox is Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His principal research areas are environmental and climate change communication and strategic studies of social movements. A internationally-recognized leading scholar who helped found the field of environmental communication, Cox is coeditor of The Routledge Handbook of Environment and Communication (2015; second edition forthcoming), editor of the four-volume reference series Environmental Communication (Sage, 2016), and the author of numerous studies of environmental and climate change campaigns. He has served three times (1994-1996; 2000-2001; 2007-2008) as president of the Sierra Club, the largest grassroots U.S. environmental organization, and was also on the board of directors for Earth Echo International, whose mission is “to empower youth to take action that restores and protects our water planet.” Cox also continues to advise environmental groups on their communication programs. He regularly participates in environmental and climate change initiatives and has campaigned with former vice president Al Gore, singer Melissa Etheridge, and other public figures. He also enjoys hiking and trekking in the Himalayas, Europe, and the southern Appalachian Mountains in the United States.



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