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Media and Transnational Climate Justice: Indigenous Activism and Climate Politics New edition [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 214 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 425 g, 14 Illustrations
  • Sērija : Global Crises and the Media 22
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Mar-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433134888
  • ISBN-13: 9781433134883
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  • Cena: 104,46 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 214 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 425 g, 14 Illustrations
  • Sērija : Global Crises and the Media 22
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Mar-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433134888
  • ISBN-13: 9781433134883
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Media and Transnational Climate Justice captures the intriguing nexus of globalization, crisis, justice, activism and news communication, at a time when radical measures are increasingly demanded to address one of the most pressing global issues: climate change. Anna Roosvall and Matthew Tegelberg take a unique approach to climate justice by focusing on transnational rather than international aspects, thereby contributing to the development of theories of justice for a global age, as well as in relation to media studies. The book specifically explores the roles, situations and activism of indigenous peoples who do not have full representation at UN climate summits despite being among those most exposed to injustices pertaining to climate change, as well as to injustices relating to politics and media coverage. This book thus scrutinizes political and ideological dimensions of the global phenomenon of climate change through interviews and observations with indigenous activists at UN climate summits, in combination with extensive empirical research conducted on legacy and social media coverage of climate change and indigenous peoples. The authors conclude by discussing transnational solidarity and suggest a solidarian mode of communication as a response to both the global crisis of climate change and the broader issues of injustice faced by indigenous peoples regarding redistribution, recognition and political representation.



Media and Transnational Climate Justice captures the intriguing nexus of globalization, crisis, justice, activism and news communication, at a time when radical measures are increasingly demanded to address one of the most pressing global issues of our times: climate change.

Recenzijas

What is the role of the media in communicating climate justice? Who speaks and who should speak? Rigorous and clear, this is the first volume that explores these questions as questions of struggle over voice. It offers a compelling critique of dominant climate reporting and makes a strong case for listening to the indigenous populations that suffer from our changing environment.Lilie Chouliaraki, Professor, Department of Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science A wide-ranging, interdisciplinary study of activism and media based on original research. This is a timely and insightful contribution to theorizing global justice as involving solidarity and voice beyond existing political structures.Kate Nash, Professor of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London, and Faculty Fellow, Center for Cultural Sociology, Yale University This is a terrific book, deeply unsettling yet ultimately hopeful. Carefully argued, innovatively researched, and written with fierce optimism, it seeks to reframe and revision a prevailing understanding of climate change. It endeavours to add new and necessary voices to a conversation that has been lopsided and too often has ignored Indigenous input. Read it!Mark Cronlund Anderson, Professor in the Department of History, University of Regina Media and Transnational Climate Justice makes a major contribution to our understanding of media and climate change by amplifying and contextualizing crucial and often missing voices of transnational Indigenous peoples and activist networks. In articulating and defining what climate justice means and why it matters, Roosvall and Tegelberg reveal the silencing, muffling, and misframing of Indigenous perspectives, and highlight the need for more just, fair, and accurate journalism that addresses potential universal and particular futures with climate change.Candis Callison, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Journalism, University of British Columbia Media and Transnational Climate Justice puts indigenous voices at the center of how we understand climate justice, offering an expansive analysis of transnational solidarity and the ways that it shapes and is shaped by sophisticated forms and practices of media activism. By combining the experiences of indigenous media activists, analysis of indigenous representations in legacy news, and fresh theoretical insight that challenge dominant climate politics, this exceptionally thoughtful and well researched book offers a blueprint for media justice. It is an essential read not only for those seeking to understand and reform climate politics but also for those interested in the ways media can support rather than undermine justice.Adrienne Russell, Mary Laird Wood Professor of Journalism and the Environment, University of Washington

List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
List of Abbreviations
xvii
Chapter 1 Introduction: Calling for Climate Justice!
1(32)
From Climate Change to Climate Justice
5(3)
Geographical Scales
8(3)
Climate News Media Ecologies
11(1)
Activism and Politics
12(3)
Mixed Methodological Approach
15(6)
Studying Representations with the Represented
21(1)
The Structure of the Book
22(11)
Chapter 2 What Is Climate Justice? Justice, Climate and the Media
33(36)
The Justice in Climate Justice
36(33)
The Substance of Justice
37(2)
Responsibility
39(4)
The Geographical Framing of Justice: Re-theorizing Justice and the Media in a Globalizing Age
43(2)
The Climate in Climate Justice
45(3)
International Climate Justice
48(5)
Intranational Climate Justice
53(4)
Transnational and Global Climate Justice
57(3)
Conclusion
60(9)
Chapter 3 Diverging Geographies: Indigenous Peoples, Climate Change and the UN COP Summits
69(34)
Climate Change as a Problem of Scale: The Case of Indigenous Peoples
72(2)
Connecting Scales: Indigenous Knowledge in Climate Research and Policy
74(3)
Climate Testimonials from the Arctic to the Amazon: Geographies of Climate Change Impacts on Indigenous Peoples
77(9)
Arctic Peoples
79(2)
Island Peoples
81(2)
Forest and Desert Peoples
83(1)
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
84(2)
Geographies of Indigenous Participation at the COPs
86(10)
Indigenous Representation Inside the COPs
86(7)
Indigenous Representation Outside the COPs
93(3)
Conclusion
96(7)
Chapter 4 Summit Journalism, Indigenous Peoples and Digitalization: A Media Ecology Perspective
103(32)
Confronting Invisibility: The Rise of Indigenous Media
105(4)
Media, Digitalization and Environmental Protest
106(1)
Indigenous Media Vanguard
107(2)
Journalism and UN Climate Summits
109(2)
Legacy Media, Its Centrality and Limitations
111(6)
Social Media as News Source and Connective Tool
117(6)
Social Media as Connective Tool
119(4)
Becoming the Media: Multifaceted Strategies of Indigenous Self-representation
123(5)
Conclusion
128(7)
Chapter 5 Activism, Agonism, Agency: Indigenous Peoples, Media Witnessing and the Political Game of the Summits
135(38)
Agonistic Democracy and Climate Justice: Conflict, Exclusion and Recognition in the Summit Context
137(18)
Politics Versus the Political: What Is the Story and Who Tells It? Varieties of Voice and Agency
144(1)
Politics: The Political Game Frame, the (Inter)national Scale and Domestication
144(4)
The Political: Activism, Its Indispensability and Its Suppression
148(7)
Varieties of Media Witnessing, Varieties of Voice and Affect
155(7)
Edited Media Witnessing: Mainstream Media Accounts of Indigenous Victim-Heroes and an Emerging Focus on Political Representation
156(4)
Un-/Self-Edited Media Witnessing: The Political, Pluralism and the Bridging of Discourses
160(2)
Conclusion
162(11)
Chapter 6 (Dis)connections: Particularism Versus Universalism, and Transnational Solidarity
173(24)
(Dis)connections: Rights, Politics, Media
176(2)
The Particular Versus the Universal: Rights, Politics, Media
178(5)
Solidarity and/as Communication
183(5)
Understandings of Solidarity
183(2)
Transnational Solidarity in Indigenous Activism and Journalism: Attitudes and Practices
185(3)
Conclusion
188(9)
Appendix: Interview Questions 197(6)
Index 203
Anna Roosvall received her PhD at Stockholm University, where she is Professor in the Department of Media Studies. In 2016 she was Visiting Fellow at LSE, London (Department of Media and Communications). Her publications include Communicating the Nation (2010, Inka Salovaara-Moring, co-editor).



Matthew Tegelberg received his PhD from Trent University and is Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Science at York University. He recently co-edited Media and Global Climate Knowledge: Climate Journalism and the IPCC (2017).