The 2030 agenda for development, or what is known as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), is perhaps the most ambitious agenda collectively agreed upon by 193 countries in human history. Yet, the framers of the 2030 agenda for development forgot to dedicate one goal focused on the role of communication in achieving the SDGs. Such oversight has attracted the attention of media and communication scholars alike, journalists, and policymakers who understand that it is nearly impossible to achieve the SDGs without the articulation and embrace of the role of communication in development. Volume 2 provides in-depth and specific explorations into regional perspectives concerning communication and the SDGs, with research on a rich array of sources, including Latin America, Africa, Australia, as well as special cases relating to timely studies such as social media, COVID-19, marginalized voices, and women’s equality.
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Introduction: Sustainable Competitiveness in a Digital Age.- Chapter 2. Communication for All in Africa: The Complexities of Development and Communication.- Chapter 3. Communication for All in the 21st century. Inequalities as development dilemmas in Latin America.- Chapter 4. Public Service Media and Sustainability?A Critical Debate of the Value of Public Service Media in Supporting the SDG18 (Communication for All).- Chapter 5. Sovereign Communication: Realising First Nations Media and Information Literacy and Sustainability in Australia.- Chapter 6. Tracking the Diffusion of Disinformation on the SDGs across Social Media Platforms.- Chapter 7. SDG18: Communication for All – Including People with a Communication Disability, Children, and People who Do not Speak Dominant Languages.- Chapter 8. COVID-19, intimate partner violence and immigrant women: SDG 18 and overcoming communication barriers to attain Goal 5.- Chapter 9. The importance of sustainable communication in the covid-19 period: The case of Turkey.- Chapter 10. Conclusion: SDG18-Communication for All: Neither too Late, Nor Too Early.
Despre autor
Jan Servaes (Ph D) is the former UNESCO Chair in Communication for Sustainable Social Change. He is the Editor of the Lexington Book Series
Communication, Globalization and Cultural Identity and Springer book series
Communication, Culture and Change in Asia.
Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u is the Editor-in-Chief of Africa Policy Journal at Harvard Kennedy School. He is the author of
Regional Parallelism and Corruption Scandals in Nigeria and co-editor of the Palgrave Handbook of International Communication and Sustainable Development.