|
|
ix | |
|
|
xi | |
Acknowledgments |
|
xiii | |
|
|
xvii | |
|
Chapter 1 Introduction: Calling for Climate Justice! |
|
|
1 | (32) |
|
From Climate Change to Climate Justice |
|
|
5 | (3) |
|
|
8 | (3) |
|
Climate News Media Ecologies |
|
|
11 | (1) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
37 | (2) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
79 | (2) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
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) |
|
|
188 | (9) |
Appendix: Interview Questions |
|
197 | (6) |
Index |
|
203 | |