REVIEW: Timely climate media strategy to empower citizens
Abstract
Journalism and Climate Crisis: Public Engagement, Media Alternatives, edited by Robert A. Hackett, Susan Forde, Shane Gunster and Kerrie Foxwell-Norton. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. 2017. 204 pages. ISBN 978-1-1389-5039-9
AT THE time of reviewing this important and timely book, Hurricane Irma had just ripped a trail of unprecedented destruction from Antigua, Barbuda and Saint Barthélemy in the eastern Caribbean to Florida with at least 81 deaths. Florida involved one of the largest mass evacuations in US history, with nearly 7 million people being warned to seek shelter elsewhere. Seventy per cent of Miami lost electricity at the height of the storm.
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Caputo, M. (2017, September 14). Florida governor remains unsure about climate change after Hurricane Irma. Politico.com. Retrieved from www.politico.com/states/florida/story/2017/09/14/florida-governor-remains-unsure-about-climate-change-after-hurricane-irma-114498
Christians, C., Glasser, T., McQuail, D., Nordenstreng, K., and White, R.A. (2009). Normative theories of the media: Journalism in democratic societies. Urbana and Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Hackett, R. A. (2017). Can peace journalism be transposed to climate crisis news? Pacific Journalism Review, 23(1), 14-24. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v23i1.100
McChesney, R.W., & Nichols, J. (2010). The death and the life of American journalism. Philadelphia, PA: Nation Books.
Multiple authors (2017, September 12). Media reaction: Hurricane Irma and climate change. Carbon Brief. Retrieved from www.carbonbrief.org/media-reaction-hurricane-irma-climate-change
Copyright (c) 2017 David Robie
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