The best-selling
Environmental Communication and the Public Sphere provides a comprehensive introduction to the growing field of environmental communication. This groundbreaking book focuses on the role that human communication plays in influencing the ways we perceive the environment. Authors Phaedra C. Pezzullo and Robert Cox examine how we define what constitutes an environmental problem and how we decide what actions to take concerning the natural world. The
Sixth Edition explores recent events and research, including fast fashion, global youth climate strikes, biodiversity loss, disability rights advocacy, single-use plastic ban controversies, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Jadual kandungan
Preface to the Sixth Edition
Introduction: Speaking for/About the Environment
About the Authors
Part I: Communicating for/About the Environment
Chapter 1: Defining Environmental Communication
Studying Environmental Communication
Communication, the Environment, and the Public Sphere
Diverse Environmental Voices in the Public Sphere
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 2: Contested Meanings: A Brief History
Turtle Island
Learning to Love Nature
Wilderness Preservation Versus Natural Resource Conservation
Public Health and the Ecology Movement
Environmental Justice: Linking Social Justice and Public Health
Contemporary Movements for Sustainability and Climate Justice
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 3: Symbolic Constructions of the Environment
A Rhetorical Perspective
Dominant and Critical Discourses
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 4: Environmental Media and Sustainability
The Environment and Popular Culture
Sustainability: An Interdisciplinary Approach
Sustainability Discourses
Corporate Sustainability Communication: Reflection or Deflection?
Greenwashing
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Part II: Environmental Campaigns and Movements
Chapter 5: Environmental Advocacy Campaigns
Environmental Advocacy
Environmental Advocacy Campaigns
The Campaign to Protect Zuni Salt Lake
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 6: Digital Environmental Organizing
Grassroots Activism and Digital Media
Environmental NGOs and Digital Campaign Dilemmas
Multimodality and Networked Campaigns
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 7: Visual and Market Advocacy
Visual Rhetoric and Nature Advocacy
Moving Images of Disasters
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 8: Environmental Justice and Climate Justice Movements
Environmental Justice: Challenges, Critiques, and Change
Honoring Frontline Knowledge and Traveling on Toxic Tours
The Global Movement for Climate Justice
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Part III: Environmental Discourses and Public Spheres
Chapter 9: Environmental Journalism
Environmental Journalism in the Public Sphere
Breaking News and Environmental Journalism
Media Effects and Influences
Digital Storytelling and Environmental News
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 10: Science and Climate Communication
Scientific Argumentation
Early Warners: Environmental Scientists and the Public
Resisting (Climate) Science
Communicating Climate Science
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 11: Public Health and Environmental Risk Communication
Dangerous Environments: Assessment in a Risk Society
Communicating Environmental Risks in the Public Sphere
The Precautionary Principle
Citizens Becoming Scientists
Voices of Environmental Risk
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Part IV: Green Governance and Legal Spheres
Chapter 12: Public Participation and Democratic Rights
Rights of Public Participation
Right to Know: Transparency and Access to Information
Right to Comment: Involvement
SLAPP: Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation
Growth of Public Participation Internationally
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Chapter 13: Voice and Public Dissent
Right of Expression and Right of Assembly
Right of Standing: Who Legally Can Speak?
Landmark Cases on Environmental Standing
Reversing, Slowing, or Reducing Global Warming as Injury
Who Should Have a Right of Standing?
Summary
Suggested Resources
Key Terms
Discussion Questions
Epilogue: Imagining Stories of/for Our Future
Glossary
References
Index
Mengenai Pengarang
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.