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E-grāmata: Environmental Communication and Critical Coastal Policy: Communities, Culture and Nature

(Griffith University, Australia)
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Charting new waters for environmental communication, this analysis of coastal management and public participation places local culture and local media at the forefront. The book addresses coastal zone management in the context of global climate change and its challenges alongside other global environmental challenges such as fossil fuel use, pollution, forest degradation, biodiversity loss and so on. Climate change is particularly relevant as the coastal zone is the environment where climate change impacts are most notable.

The book challenges the current status quo in environmental policy which posits that more science and better communication will deliver greater citizen participation in, and awareness of, environmental issues. Instead, the book argues that ‘more science and better communication’ has been largely responsible for the lacklustre response by citizens to environmental concerns and that the inclusion of a range of local meanings and cultural frameworks with which experts could engage would better incite participation in, and awareness of, local environmental issues.

This book examines the way in which local media (mainstream, alternative and social media) engages with local environmental issues. These local sets of relations which create, maintain and manage ideas and assumptions about the environment, represented within the ‘background noise’ of a wide range of media products, are critical to an ongoing effort to engage with local communities. The value and possible role of these media alternatives are examined here to illustrate and support the key argument that meaningful local engagement is a largely ignored but powerful tool in the coastal management process.

Recenzijas

"As issues of environment inexorably heave into view so they become entwined with concerns of social justice, political action and communication. It it is imperative that we better understand how these challenges are confronted and won or lost at the local level and how communities can contribute to a global wave of change. Kerrie Foxwell-Nortons timely study, Environmental Communication and Critical Coastal Policy, provides us with an eloquently written and incisive dissection of the complexities and contingencies involved. Highly recommended." Simon Cottle, Cardiff University, UK

"If millions of us care about our coastal environments, how is it that so many of these precious places are threatened by human activity? In this important book, Kerrie Foxwell-Norton shows how scholarly research can combine passion with clear insight into the political and communicative processes that can risk or save what we care about most." Libby Lester, University of Tasmania, Australia

List of figures
viii
Prelude ix
Acknowledgements xii
1 The coastal terrain
1(20)
2 Culture and the coast
21(24)
3 Coastal policy and meaningful community participation
45(21)
4 Coasts and media democracy
66(20)
5 Coasts, communication and policy: the Cabarita Beach/Bogangar experience
86(27)
6 Critical coastal policy and environmental communication: new directions?
113(20)
7 Conclusions
133(10)
Index 143
Kerrie Foxwell-Norton is a senior lecturer in communication and media studies and a member of the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research at Griffith University, Australia.