Climate Change Politics

Climate Change Politics
-0 %
Der Artikel wird am Ende des Bestellprozesses zum Download zur Verfügung gestellt.
Communication and Public Engagement
 PDF
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar

Unser bisheriger Preis:ORGPRICE: 152,01 €

Jetzt 152,00 €* PDF

Artikel-Nr:
9781624993671
Veröffentl:
2012
Einband:
PDF
Seiten:
396
Autor:
Tarla Rai Peterson
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
PDF
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

The transformations that are needed to respond to climate change require widespread political engagement as decisions need to be made in democratic ways that are simultaneously inclusive and sustainable. Despite widespread political rhetoric in favor of public participation in environmental issues, spaces for citizen involvement have been limited and very narrow. As the world teeters on the edge of irreversible climate damage, there is a sense of disillusionment, disconnection, and powerlessness. Still, and despite politically influential actors attempting to downplay its significance, society has found climate change impossible to ignore and the last few years saw the emergence of a variety of social movements and non-governmental organizations focusing on this issue. In a rapidly changing communication environment, people have imagined and created new political possibilities through conventional and new media, as well as face-to-face communication. As an issue that cuts across multiple sectors and scales, communication about climate change is redefining boundaries between the public and the private, political and domestic, subject and community. Whereas there is ample literature on climate change communication and on climate change politics, there are no books that bridge climate politics and communication. This book bridges the gap with empirically grounded international and multinational case studies. Climate Change Politics: Communication and Public Engagement offers communication as a key component of politics and demonstrates this through multiple case studies of public engagement. These case studies analyze the symbolic environment in which current democratic politics are enacted and demonstrate how both traditional and novel communication contexts may open new political possibilities. Climate Change Politics offers a critical, yet hopeful examination of political vitality in the politics of climate change and discusses how people use various forms of communication to challenge existing power hierarchies. Because the meanings of climate change and of the numerous aspects of reality associated with it are constructed through communication, we offer an analysis of communication practices and structures as constitutive of climate change politics. A broad variety of case studies demonstrate how the choices made within various forms of public engagement result from social interaction based on communication. The editors of the volume follow Chantal Mouffe in describing "e;the political"e; as engagement with processes of debate and decision making on collective issues where different values, preferences, and ideals are played out and opposed. This book examines communication as a key component of climate change politics and shows how climate change communication has the potential to invigorate civic politics. It analyzes how citizens represent, construct, and circulate ideas about climate change and how these practices relate to decisions and public policies, as well as to political identities. Contributing authors explore how changes in the ways information is produced and consumed have contributed to new spaces for political engagement. They analyze a range of semiotic resources and practices within which the meanings of climate change are negotiated. By looking at the multiple ways people experience and communicate about climate change, the analysis extends beyond the cognitive to include emotional, aesthetic, and other epistemologies that shape political engagement with this issue. Individual chapters examine various forms of climate change communication, including artistic expression ranging from installations to cinema, on web-based spaces, and on other alternative media. Working from the premise that communicative practices provide the basis for broad public engagement, this book identifies and examines how the possibilities entailed in that engagement may yet contribute to a transformation of climate change politics that empowers both individual political subjects and their communities. Climate Change Politics is likely to be of interest to a variety of audiences including researchers and students of climate change politics, environmental communication, and social movements in disciplines such as communication, geography, political science, and sociology. The book is suitable as a textbook for both advanced undergraduate and graduate courses on climate change and society; environmental communication; and science, technology, and society.
The transformations that are needed to respond to climate change require widespread political engagement as decisions need to be made in democratic ways that are simultaneously inclusive and sustainable. Despite widespread political rhetoric in favor of public participation in environmental issues, spaces for citizen involvement have been limited and very narrow. As the world teeters on the edge of irreversible climate damage, there is a sense of disillusionment, disconnection, and powerlessness. Still, and despite politically influential actors attempting to downplay its significance, society has found climate change impossible to ignore and the last few years saw the emergence of a variety of social movements and non-governmental organizations focusing on this issue. In a rapidly changing communication environment, people have imagined and created new political possibilities through conventional and new media, as well as face-to-face communication. As an issue that cuts across multiple sectors and scales, communication about climate change is redefining boundaries between the public and the private, political and domestic, subject and community. Whereas there is ample literature on climate change communication and on climate change politics, there are no books that bridge climate politics and communication. This book bridges the gap with empirically grounded international and multinational case studies. Climate Change Politics: Communication and Public Engagement offers communication as a key component of politics and demonstrates this through multiple case studies of public engagement. These case studies analyze the symbolic environment in which current democratic politics are enacted and demonstrate how both traditional and novel communication contexts may open new political possibilities. Climate Change Politics offers a critical, yet hopeful examination of political vitality in the politics of climate change and discusses how people use various forms of communication to challenge existing power hierarchies. Because the meanings of climate change and of the numerous aspects of reality associated with it are constructed through communication, we offer an analysis of communication practices and structures as constitutive of climate change politics. A broad variety of case studies demonstrate how the choices made within various forms of public engagement result from social interaction based on communication. The editors of the volume follow Chantal Mouffe in describing "e;the political"e; as engagement with processes of debate and decision making on collective issues where different values, preferences, and ideals are played out and opposed. This book examines communication as a key component of climate change politics and shows how climate change communication has the potential to invigorate civic politics. It analyzes how citizens represent, construct, and circulate ideas about climate change and how these practices relate to decisions and public policies, as well as to political identities. Contributing authors explore how changes in the ways information is produced and consumed have contributed to new spaces for political engagement. They analyze a range of semiotic resources and practices within which the meanings of climate change are negotiated. By looking at the multiple ways people experience and communicate about climate change, the analysis extends beyond the cognitive to include emotional, aesthetic, and other epistemologies that shape political engagement with this issue. Individual chapters examine various forms of climate change communication, including artistic expression ranging from installations to cinema, on web-based spaces, and on other alternative media. Working from the premise that communicative practices provide the basis for broad public engagement, this book identifies and examines how the possibilities entailed in that engagement may yet contribute to a transformation of climate change politics that empowers both individual political subjects and their communities. Climate Change Politics is likely to be of interest to a variety of audiences including researchers and students of climate change politics, environmental communication, and social movements in disciplines such as communication, geography, political science, and sociology. The book is suitable as a textbook for both advanced undergraduate and graduate courses on climate change and society; environmental communication; and science, technology, and society.

Kunden Rezensionen

Zu diesem Artikel ist noch keine Rezension vorhanden.
Helfen sie anderen Besuchern und verfassen Sie selbst eine Rezension.