This edited collection provides a unique survey of the ways in which news media organizations across Latin America and the Caribbean cover global, regional and local environmental issues and challenges. There is growing recognition within academia, governments, industries, NGOs and civil society about the importance of strategic communication and the news media in informing current societal and policy discussions about environmental issues. With this in mind, this volume explores the content of reporting as well as the structural and individual contests faced by media organizations and journalists, with a focus on the very unique political, social, cultural and environmental conditions that affect the countries individually. The book provides a survey of the most relevant and current environmental issues that have attracted public attention across the region and within countries in Latin America and the Caribbean in the first part of the 21st century.
This volume will be of interest to students, instructors and researchers interested in Latin America and the Caribbean, media and the environment.
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Challenges in the reporting of environmental issues in Latin America and the Caribbean.- Part One. North America and the Caribbean.- Chapter 2: The News Media and Environmental Challenges in Mexico: the Structural Deficits of Coverage and Reporting by the Press.- Chapter 3: Comparing Cuban and South Florida Spanish-Language Media Coverage of Sea Level Rise.- Part Two. The Andes and the Amazon regions.- Chapter 4: Environmental Journalism in Brazil: History, Characteristics, and Framing of Disasters.- Chapter 5:Environmental News Coverage in Ecuador: New Resources but Old Media-State Tensions and Practices.- Chapter 6: Environmental journalism in Colombia: An analysis of two specialized environmental magazines.- Chapter 7: The challenges for environmental reporting in Peru: Coverage of small-scale mining in Peruvian newspapers.- Part Three. Southern South America.- Chapter 8: Environmental journalism in Argentina.- Chapter 9: The future of environmental communication and journalism in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Despre autor
Bruno Takahashi is Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism and the Department of Communication at Michigan State University, USA.
Juliet Pinto is Associate Professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Florida International University, USA.
Manuel Chavez is Associate Professor in the School of Journalism at Michigan State University, USA.
Mercedes Vigón is Associate Professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Florida International University, USA.