The Environmental Communication Yearbook: Volume 3, Volume 3Stephen P. Depoe Routledge, 2014 M04 8 - 304 pages First Published in 2006. For scholars and students in environmental communications, journalism, rhetoric, PR, mass communication and other related areas. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 86
Page 1918
... example, as farmers in the Klamath Basin protested in July of 2001, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) activated the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) provision of the Clean Water Act in Oregon to control nonpoint source pollution ...
... example, as farmers in the Klamath Basin protested in July of 2001, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) activated the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) provision of the Clean Water Act in Oregon to control nonpoint source pollution ...
Page 1920
... example, communicate meanings and attitudes that stress fatality, resignation, and humility, in the acceptance of human limitations. In the comic frame, Burke suggests that humans turn their limitations and liabilities into assets by ...
... example, communicate meanings and attitudes that stress fatality, resignation, and humility, in the acceptance of human limitations. In the comic frame, Burke suggests that humans turn their limitations and liabilities into assets by ...
Page 1923
... example, Egan (1991), White (1995), and Rapp (1997). 2The shrinking supply of fresh water in the American West is a growing problem caused by the constant increase in demand from a number of sources and this is discussed at length, for ...
... example, Egan (1991), White (1995), and Rapp (1997). 2The shrinking supply of fresh water in the American West is a growing problem caused by the constant increase in demand from a number of sources and this is discussed at length, for ...
Page 1924
... example , who use land for agriculture , are a part of the public but they are not the public in and of themselves.3 As such , they do not have the right to determine water use as owners themselves . However , they do have the same ...
... example , who use land for agriculture , are a part of the public but they are not the public in and of themselves.3 As such , they do not have the right to determine water use as owners themselves . However , they do have the same ...
Page 1925
... examples , any mitigating circumstances that might put the federal government and the ESA in a better light are suppressed as the cry for water rights drowns any sense of duty . Thus , the protest obliterates the discriminations of the ...
... examples , any mitigating circumstances that might put the federal government and the ESA in a better light are suppressed as the cry for water rights drowns any sense of duty . Thus , the protest obliterates the discriminations of the ...
Contents
1912 | |
1939 | |
From Dualisms to Dialogism Hybridity in Discourse About the Natural World | 1972 |
Avenues for Social | 1931 |
Rejuvenating Nature in Commercial Culture and the Implications of the Green | 1953 |
A Case Study of the Environmentalist | 1973 |
Substitution or Pollution? Competing Views of Environmental Benefit in a Gas | 1968 |
The Global Responsibility Frame at Earth | 1990 |
Space as a Wilderness a Miracle and a Resource | 1990 |
A Social Capital Approach | 1994 |
Catalyzing Environmental Environmental Communication Through Evolving Internet | 2005 |
Umer Farooq Cecelia B Merkel Lu Xiao Heather Nash Mary Beth Rosson and John M | |
Author Index | |
Subject Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
activists activities actors Agenda 21 American analysis anthropocentric argued argument articulation astronauts audience AVEDA Bakhtin Balikpapan burlesque frame Bush chapter Chawla civic cognitive apprenticeship cognitive framing cognitive framing device commercial jeremiad conservation construction critical culture Dato e-mail Earth Summit ecological economic environment environmental attitudes environmental communication environmental discourse environmental issues environmental movement environmental organizations environmental rhetoric environmentalist sample environmentalists Erin Brockovich example exploration film global responsibility Habermas Herndl heteroglossia human identify Indonesian Internet jeremiad Journal Kathy Khor Klamath Basin language metaphors microframes monisms natural world Naturkraft orangutans Oregonian participation participatory design perpetual potential perspective political pollution President primatologists protection public sphere Rechelbacher recycling behavior relationship Retrieved Roberts/Brockovich role scenario SCWC sexy social capital socioideological specific stakeholders strategy sustainable development symbolic package television theory United Nations University Press utterance watershed Web-site York