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Intersectional Activism in Environmental Communication
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Intersectional Activism in Environmental Communication explores global environmental activism around the world, from Indigenous women's activism in Brazil and India to energy protests in South Korea, to the Dakota Access pipeline construction on Standing Rock Sioux territory, to the contours of the internet. This volume addresses how intersectional environmental activism can effectively challenge systems and practices that perpetuate ecological degradation and environmental injustices.

Produktbeschreibung
Intersectional Activism in Environmental Communication explores global environmental activism around the world, from Indigenous women's activism in Brazil and India to energy protests in South Korea, to the Dakota Access pipeline construction on Standing Rock Sioux territory, to the contours of the internet. This volume addresses how intersectional environmental activism can effectively challenge systems and practices that perpetuate ecological degradation and environmental injustices.
Autorenporträt
Emma Frances Bloomfield is an associate professor of communication studies at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who studies environmental communication and scientific controversies. She is the winner of the 2024 Early Career Award from the Rhetorical and Communication Theory Division of the National Communication Association. She is the author of Science v. Story: Narrative Strategies for Science Communicators (2024) and Communication Strategies for Engaging Climate Skeptics: Religion and the Environment (2019). Her research has been profiled in national and international media outlets such as The Guardian, National Public Radio, Variety, Grist, and Popular Science. She is the founder and director of the Public Communication Initiative, housed in UNLV's Greenspun College of Urban Affairs, which conducts original research and leads workshops on technical-public relationships, communication skills, and community engagement. José Castro-Sotomayor is an assistant professor of environmental communication at California State University Channel Islands. His work delves into the environmental and intercultural dynamics of policy development and community building. As a community-based research faculty fellow at CSUCI, he designs and implements identity-based participatory communication models for environmental conflict resolution. He coedited the Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity (2020), which received the Tarla Rai Peterson Book Award from the Environmental Communication Division of the National Communication Association. He serves on editorial boards of several journals in the communication field, including Frontiers in Communication, Quarterly Journal of Speech, and Environmental Communication . He is part of the Environmental and Climate Change Literacy Projects, a University of California-California State University network dedicated to advancing K-12 climate literacy initiatives in California, and with the Beach Sustainability Assessment he works on interdisciplinary projects that address beach accessibility justice in California.