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Media Reform and the Climate Emergency: Rethinking Communication in the Struggle for a Sustainable Future [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x22 mm, weight: 333 g, 1 chart
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Sep-2021
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472132717
  • ISBN-13: 9780472132713
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 76,29 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x22 mm, weight: 333 g, 1 chart
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Sep-2021
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472132717
  • ISBN-13: 9780472132713
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
"Award-winning author David J. Park argues that the battle against global warming is also a fight for media reform. With his new book Media Reform and the Climate Emergency: Rethinking Communication in the Struggle for a Sustainable World, he critically examines how advertising, the digital infrastructure, and journalism advance the climate emergency and lays out a path of reform to help create a more sustainable world. The production and consumption of goods and services within consumer societies lead to unsustainable greenhouse gas emissions, and Park finds that much of mass communication is either dependent upon or closely tied to the success of this social organization. As a result, he suggests successful environmental movements creatively dismantle or reform institutional infrastructures that extend the planetary global warming crisis and the unsustainable consumption of nature. Communication policies and industries are part of these infrastructures. Advertising evolved to propel a new consumer society that would encourage the over-consumption of goods and services with harmful and unsustainable production processes. Our digital infrastructure is largely premised upon the surveillance of online consumer habits and preferences, with the goal to create individualized messages to more effectively persuade people to increase their consumption habits. Much of commercial journalism resists the drastic and immediate regulatory changes necessary to address the worst aspects of this crisis. This is because so many of the needed changes challenge the media's source of income, their libertarian philosophy, and the general status quo, which is preferred by elites. Bound to foster conversations among scholars, activists, politicians, and those who work in the communication industries, this book rethinks mass communication and highlights how immediate reform is needed in the struggle for a sustainable planet"--

Award-winning author David J. Park argues that the battle against global warming is also a fight for media reform. With his new book Media Reform and the Climate Emergency: Rethinking Communication in the Struggle for a Sustainable Future, he critically examines how advertising, the digital infrastructure, and journalism advance the climate emergency and lays out a path of reform to help create a more sustainable world. The production and consumption of goods and services within consumer societies lead to unsustainable greenhouse gas emissions, and Park finds that much of mass communication is either dependent upon or closely tied to the success of this social organization. As a result, he suggests successful environmental movements creatively dismantle or reform institutional infrastructures that extend the planetary global warming crisis and the unsustainable consumption of nature.

Communication policies and industries are part of these infrastructures. Advertising evolved to propel a new consumer society that would encourage the over-consumption of goods and services with harmful and unsustainable production processes. Our digital infrastructure is largely premised upon the surveillance of online consumer habits and preferences, with the goal to create individualized messages to more effectively persuade people to increase their consumption habits. Much of commercial journalism resists the drastic and immediate regulatory changes necessary to address the worst aspects of this crisis. This is because so many of the needed changes challenge the media’s source of income, their libertarian philosophy, and the general status quo, which is preferred by elites. Bound to foster conversations among scholars, activists, politicians, and those who work in the communication industries, this book rethinks mass communication and highlights how immediate reform is needed in the struggle for a sustainable planet.



Advertising = consumption = climate change

Recenzijas

Silver Medal: 2022 Nautilus Book Award in the Social Sciences and Education Section * Nautilus Book Award * Finalist: Next Generation 2022 Indie Book Award in Social Justice * Next Generation Indie Book Awards * Finalist: 2022 American Book Fest Best Book Award Current Events Category * American Book Fest * Runner-Up: International Communication Association (ICA) 2022 Global Communication and Social Change Division Book Award * ICA Global Communication and Social Change Division Book Award *

Introduction 1(14)
I Climate Emergency and Political Will
One The Last Generation to Stop the Disaster
15(10)
Two US Political Will to Address the Climate Crisis
25(20)
II Advertising, Climate Change, and Reform
Three Advertising, Consumerism, Industrialism, and Ideology
45(14)
Four Advertising and Its Interdependence with the Origins of the Climate Crisis
59(16)
Five Conceptualizing a Mitigative Model of Advertising
75(20)
III The Digital Era and Its Contribution to the Crisis
Six Digital Era Advertising, Surveillance, Exploitation, and Inequities
95(23)
Seven Challenges to Sustainability in the Digital Era
118(15)
IV Journalism and Climate Change
Eight Challenges to US Climate Change Journalism
133(22)
Nine Misinformation, Blogs, and Public Opinion
155(16)
Ten The Battle against Global Warming Is Also a Fight for Media Reform
171(20)
Conclusion 191(10)
Notes 201(30)
References 231(48)
Index 279
David J. Park is Professor in the Department of Communication at Florida International University.