Editorial Scope The Environmental Communication Yearbook is a multidisciplinary forum through which a broad audience of academics, professionals, and practitioners can share and build theoretical, critical, and applied scholarship addressing environmental communication in a variety of contexts. This peer-reviewed annual publication invites submissions that showcase and/or advance our understanding of the production, reception, contexts, or processes of human communication regarding environmental issues. Theoretical expositions, literature reviews, case studies, cultural and mass media studies, best practices, and essays on emerging issues are welcome, as are both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Areas of topical coverage will include: *participatory processes: public participation, collaborative decision making, dispute resolution, consensus building processes, regulatory negotiations, community dialogue, building civic capacity; *journalism and mass communications: newspaper, magazine, book and other forms of printed mass media; advertising and public relations; media studies; and radio, television, and Internet broadcasting; and *communication studies: rhetorical/historical case studies, organizational analyses, public relations/issues management, interpersonal/relational dimensions, risk communication, and psychological/cognitive research, all of which examine the origins, content, structure, and outcomes of discourse about environmental issues. Submissions are accepted on an ongoing basis for inclusion in volumes published annually. Audience Researchers, scholars, students and practitioners in environmental communication, journalism, rhetoric, public relations, mass communication, risk analysis, political science, environmental education, environmental studies, public administrations; policymakers; others interested in environmental issues and the communication channels used for discourse and information dissemination on the topic. For more information and guidelines for submissions, visit www.erlbaum.com/ecy.htm.
Editorial Scope The Environmental Communication Yearbook is a multidisciplinary forum through which a broad audience of academics, professionals, and practitioners can share and build theoretical, critical, and applied scholarship ...
For scholars and students in environmental communications, journalism, rhetoric, PR, mass communication and other related areas.
Communication Yearbook 29 centers on the theme of Communication and the Future. Authors in this volume address the future as they review 12 diverse areas of communication research.
Communication Yearbook 40 completes four decades of publishing state-of-the-discipline literature reviews and essays.
Communication Yearbook 39 continues the tradition of publishing state-of-the-discipline literature reviews and essays.
Borrowing from psychologist James Jerome Gibson's (1986) classic The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception, therefore, this chapter will describe which affordances are enabled by various media and which are not.
National Communication Association. Retrieved from https://www .natcom.org/communication-currents/gambling- paris-climate-accord-communicates-end-era Pring, ... In S. L. Senecah (Ed.), The environmental communication yearbook (vol.
Communications and Society, 31(3), 223–238. Cantrill, J. G. (2008). A sense of self-in-place for adaptive management, capacity building and public participation. In S. L. Senecah (Ed.), The environmental communication yearbook (Vol ...
The environmental communication yearbook. Lawrence Erlbaum Associated Publishers. Shore, C. (2010). Locating the work of policy. In H. Colebatch, R. Hoppe, & M. Noordegraaf (Eds.), Working for policy (pp. 211–226).
When environmental communication became a discipline in the United States in the 1980s, it coincided with the emergence of environmental crises such as pollution, ecological disasters, and technological risks.