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Routledge Handbook of Environmental Journalism [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 422 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 980 g, 4 Line drawings, black and white; 21 Halftones, black and white; 25 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138478504
  • ISBN-13: 9781138478503
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 422 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 980 g, 4 Line drawings, black and white; 21 Halftones, black and white; 25 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Environment and Sustainability Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138478504
  • ISBN-13: 9781138478503
Teised raamatud teemal:

The Routledge Handbook of Environmental Journalism provides a thorough understanding of environmental journalism around the world.

An increasing number of media platforms – from newspapers and television to Internet social media networks – are the major providers of indispensable information about the natural world and environmental risk. Despite the dramatic changes in the news industry that have tended to reduce the number of full-time newspaper reporters, environmental journalists remain key to bringing stories to light across the globe. With contributions from around the world broken down into five key regions – the United States of America, Europe and Russia, Asia and Australia, Africa and the Middle East, and South America – this book provides support for today’s environment reporters, the providers of essential news in the 21st century.

As a scholarly and journalistic work written by academics and the environmental reporters themselves, this volume is an essential text for students and scholars of environmental communication, journalism, and global environmental issues more generally, as well as professionals working in this vital area.

Arvustused

"David Sachsman and JoAnn Valenti have a rare and precious combination of skills -- accomplishment and street-cred in both the practice and teaching of environmental journalism. They've compiled an exhaustive, authoritative look at the craft, how it evolved, and how it impacted our past, impacts our world today, and will impact our future." -- Peter Dykstra, Editor, Environmental Health News (EHN.org) and dailyclimate.org; Contributor, Public Radio International's Living on Earth; Former Executive Producer, CNN Science and Environment, USA

"The authors of the chapters of the handbook, mostly active environmental journalists but many of them with functions in academia too, provide an impressive global overview of the state of environmental journalism. While some observers of the media system speak of journalism mainly as a relic of the past, a living fossil prone to extinction, the authors themselves are examples of a reconfiguration of environmental journalism in a changed communication ecosystem. Environmental journalism struggles but the good news is that it seems to be too stubborn to die out." -- Hans Peter Peters, Editor, Public Understanding of Science; Adjunct Professor of Science Journalism, Free University of Berlin; Research Fellow, Research Center Jülich, Germany

"This is an ambitious project, as most all handbook projects are. The chapters paint an amazingly rich picture of environmental journalism as it exists in the world today, as well as where it came from. This includes making connections to "nature writing," to the rise of internet-based reporting, to the concomitant fall of mainstream journalism in so many places, to the differing social and cultural contexts around the globe that mold and are molded by what journalism (in its varying forms) has to say about environment as about everything else. I recommend it for the breadth and depth of its discussion of all these issues and more. I can certainly see how many of its chapters might find their way into graduate and undergraduate curricula of the near future, especially where teachers want to encourage awareness of global trends, global variations, and global challenges." -- Susanna Priest, Editor-in-Chief, Science Communication: Linking Theory and Practice, USA; Author, Communicating Climate Change: The Path Forward; Editor,

Ethics and Practice in Science Communication

"Journalists and the environment are facing a global reckoning. Never before have threats been so severe to the earth, and to the individuals that chronicle its fate. David B. Sachsman and JoAnn Myer Valenti take a bold, comprehensive and vital look at the forces that are shaping global environmental journalism through personal stories of triumph and danger, history, and geographic hotspots of environmental degradation. This seminal handbook paints the most complete picture yet of one of the most important news endeavors of our time: environmental journalism." -- Beth Daley

Editor and General Manager, TheConversation.com/US; Former environment reporter for the Boston Globe; Pulitzer finalist for climate coverage

List of figures
ix
About the editors xii
List of contributors
xiii
Acknowledgments xx
Introduction: environmental journalism 1(16)
David B. Sachsman
JoAnn Myer Volenti
PART I Journalism and the environment
17(106)
1 The development of environmental journalism in the Western world
19(19)
Mark Neuzil
2 Sources, strategic communication, and environmental journalism
38(14)
Anders Hansen
3 The rise of environmental journalism in Asia, Africa, and Latin America
52(18)
Bill Kovarik
4 In the crosshairs: the perils of environmental journalism
70(13)
Eric Freedman
5 Finding and following the facts in an era of fake news
83(12)
Carey Gillam
6 Audio storytelling
95(4)
Judy Fahys
7 When environmental documentary films are journalism
99(14)
JoAnn Myer Valenti
8 The education needs of future environmental journalists
113(10)
Bernardo H. Motta
PART II Environmental journalism in the United States
123(54)
9 Love Canal
125(7)
Rae Tyson
10 "What was tritium?" Conquering our own ignorance
132(14)
Jane Kay
11 Reporting on nuclear weapons of mass destruction: the Rocky Flats bomb factory
146(8)
Len Ackland
12 How we reported on the paving of paradise
154(5)
Craig Pittman
13 Risky business: covering the environment in a changing media landscape
159(12)
Mark Schleifstein
14 I communicate, therefore I tweet
171(6)
Bud Ward
PART III Environmental journalism in Europe and Russia
177(86)
15 Environmental journalism -- the British experience
179(9)
Robin Whitlock
16 The environmental beat: public confusion, digital media, social media, and fake news in the United Kingdom and Ireland
188(15)
John Gibbons
17 Environmental journalism in France at a turning point
203(9)
Magali Reinert
18 A green facade on a crumbling building? Environmental journalism in Germany
212(9)
Christopher Schroder
19 Environmental journalism in the Nordic countries
221(13)
Jari Lyytimaki
20 Environmental journalism in Spain
234(12)
Maria-Teresa Mercado-Saez
Manuel Chavez
21 Environmental journalism in Russia
246(4)
Angelina Davydova
22 Bringing climate change reporting to Russia
250(5)
Angelina Davydova
23 The state of environmental journalism in the Balkan region
255(5)
Maria Bolevich
24 Covering the environment in Ukraine
260(3)
Mariana Verbovska
PART IV Environmental coverage in Asia and Australia
263(66)
25 The status and future of environmental journalism in Japan
265(13)
Masako Konishi
26 Environmental news reports in China
278(13)
Ji Li
27 Environmental journalism in India: past, present, and future
291(15)
Maitreyee Mishra
28 Environmental journalism in Australia and New Zealand
306(10)
Maxine Newlands
29 Environmental journalism in the Asia and Pacific region
316(13)
Maxine Newlands
PART V Environmental reporting in Africa and the Middle East
329(52)
30 Environmental journalism --- a perspective from South Africa
331(12)
Tony Carnie
31 Swashbuckling tales: Oxpeckers peck away at the digital future of environmental journalism
343(11)
Fiona Macleod
32 Environmental journalism in East Africa: opportunities and challenges in the 21st century
354(12)
Margaret Jjuuko
33 Environmental journalism in Nigeria and Gambia
366(7)
Ngozi Okpara
34 Journalism and environmental issues in the Middle East
373(8)
Nadia Rahman
PART VI Environmental journalism in South America
381(25)
35 Environmental journalism in Latin America
383(9)
Fermin Koop
36 Ice magnet: the story of a thousand stories
392(6)
Angela Posada-Swafford
37 Under the canopy, by the river: covering stories in the Amazon and Congo basins and the importance of a "pantropical" journalism
398(8)
Gustavo Faleiros
Index 406
David B. Sachsman holds the George R. West, Jr. Chair of Excellence in Communication and Public Affairs at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. His books include Environmental Risk and the Press, The Reporters Environmental Handbook, and Environment Reporters in the 21st Century.

JoAnn Myer Valenti, Emerita Professor of Communication, is co-author of Environment Reporters in the 21st Century, a founding SEJ Academic Board Member, and an AAAS Fellow.