BIBLIOTHEQUE SNVSTU
Détail de l'indexation
Ouvrages de la bibliothèque en indexation 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux
Faire une suggestion Affiner la recherche Interroger des sources externes
Titre : Earth's Fury : The science of natural disasters Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Alexander Gates, Auteur Editeur : Wiley Blackwell Année de publication : 2022 Importance : 403p. Présentation : ill. Format : 27.5cm ×22cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-119-54659-7 Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng) Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé : .
EARTH’S FURY
Natural disasters are any catastrophic loss of life and/or property caused by a natural event or situation. This definition could include biologic issues such as contagion, injurious bacterial colonization, invasion of dangerous plants and infestations of insects and other vermin. However, the popular understanding of what constitutes a natural disaster still focuses on disasters involving the physical properties of the earth and its atmosphere: earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, avalanches, tropical storms, tornadoes, floods and wildfires.
Earth’s Fury: The Science of Natural Disasters attempts to combine the best features of a scientific textbook and an encyclopedia. It retains the organization of a textbook and adopts the highly illustrative graphics of some of the newer and more effective textbooks. The book’s unique approach is evident in its plethora of case studies: short, self-contained and well-illustrated stories of specific natural disasters that are highly engaging for both science and non-science majors. The stories incorporate the science into the event so students appreciate and remember it as part of the story. By relating the event to the impact on society and human lives, the science is placed in the context of the student’s real life.
Boasting a number of striking and highly detailed double-page illustrations of disaster-producing features, including volcanoes, earthquakes, tsunamis and hurricanes, this book is as much a visual resource as a textbook. For students who are probably most familiar with natural disasters through Hollywood movies, this book’s own “widescreen presentation” is coupled with exciting stories which will enhance their interest as well as their understanding.
Whether they are science or non-science majors, Earth’s Fury: The Science of Natural Disasters will appeal to all students, with its fresh approach and engaging style.Note de contenu : .
Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction to Natural Disasters
Chapter 2: Moving Continents
Chapter 3: How Does Rock Melt?
Chapter 4: Types of Volcanoes
Chapter 5: Volcanic Hazards
Chapter 6: Causes of Earthquakes
Chapter 7: Earthquakes 101
Chapter 8: Earthquake Hazards
Chapter 9: Killer Tsunamis
Chapter 10: Predicting Earthquakes and Reducing Hazards
Chapter 11: Avalanches and Landslides
Chapter 12: Weather and Storms
Chapter 13: Ocean Circulation and Coastal Systems
Chapter 14: Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons
Chapter 15: Tornadoes and Supercells: Terrors of the Plains
Chapter 16: Devastating Floods and Their Aftermath
Chapter 17: Droughts and Desertification
Chapter 18: Impacts: Collisions from Space
Chapter 19: Climate Change DynamicsEn ligne : https://media.wiley.com/product_data/coverImage300/91/11195465/1119546591.jpg Earth's Fury : The science of natural disasters [texte imprimé] / Alexander Gates, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Wiley Blackwell, 2022 . - 403p. : ill. ; 27.5cm ×22cm.
ISBN : 978-1-119-54659-7
Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng)
Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé : .
EARTH’S FURY
Natural disasters are any catastrophic loss of life and/or property caused by a natural event or situation. This definition could include biologic issues such as contagion, injurious bacterial colonization, invasion of dangerous plants and infestations of insects and other vermin. However, the popular understanding of what constitutes a natural disaster still focuses on disasters involving the physical properties of the earth and its atmosphere: earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, avalanches, tropical storms, tornadoes, floods and wildfires.
Earth’s Fury: The Science of Natural Disasters attempts to combine the best features of a scientific textbook and an encyclopedia. It retains the organization of a textbook and adopts the highly illustrative graphics of some of the newer and more effective textbooks. The book’s unique approach is evident in its plethora of case studies: short, self-contained and well-illustrated stories of specific natural disasters that are highly engaging for both science and non-science majors. The stories incorporate the science into the event so students appreciate and remember it as part of the story. By relating the event to the impact on society and human lives, the science is placed in the context of the student’s real life.
Boasting a number of striking and highly detailed double-page illustrations of disaster-producing features, including volcanoes, earthquakes, tsunamis and hurricanes, this book is as much a visual resource as a textbook. For students who are probably most familiar with natural disasters through Hollywood movies, this book’s own “widescreen presentation” is coupled with exciting stories which will enhance their interest as well as their understanding.
Whether they are science or non-science majors, Earth’s Fury: The Science of Natural Disasters will appeal to all students, with its fresh approach and engaging style.Note de contenu : .
Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction to Natural Disasters
Chapter 2: Moving Continents
Chapter 3: How Does Rock Melt?
Chapter 4: Types of Volcanoes
Chapter 5: Volcanic Hazards
Chapter 6: Causes of Earthquakes
Chapter 7: Earthquakes 101
Chapter 8: Earthquake Hazards
Chapter 9: Killer Tsunamis
Chapter 10: Predicting Earthquakes and Reducing Hazards
Chapter 11: Avalanches and Landslides
Chapter 12: Weather and Storms
Chapter 13: Ocean Circulation and Coastal Systems
Chapter 14: Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons
Chapter 15: Tornadoes and Supercells: Terrors of the Plains
Chapter 16: Devastating Floods and Their Aftermath
Chapter 17: Droughts and Desertification
Chapter 18: Impacts: Collisions from Space
Chapter 19: Climate Change DynamicsEn ligne : https://media.wiley.com/product_data/coverImage300/91/11195465/1119546591.jpg Réservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 23/323138 L/363.039 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 23/233137 L/363.039 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible
Titre : Essential concepts of environmental communication : An A-Z Guide Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Pat Brereton, Auteur Editeur : Routledge studies in environmental communication and media Année de publication : 2022 Importance : 283p. Présentation : ill. Format : 23.5cmx 15.5cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-367-64202-0 Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng) Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé : .
This book draws on a broad spectrum of environmental communications and related cross-disciplinary literature to help students and scholars grasp the interconnecting key concepts within this ever-expanding field of study. Aligning climate change and environmental learning through media and communications, particularly taking into account the post-COVID challenge of sustainability, remains one of the most important concerns within environmental communications. Addressing this challenge, Essential Concepts for Environmental Communication synthesises summary writings from a broad range of environmental theorists, while teasing out provocative concepts and key ideas that frame this evolving, multi-disciplinary field. Each entry maps out an important concept or environmental idea and illustrates how it relates more broadly across the growing field of environmental communication debates. Included in this volume is a full section dedicated to exploring what environmental communication might look like in a post-COVID setting:
• Offers cutting-edge analysis of the current state of environmental communications.
• Presents an up-to-date exploration of environmental and sustainable development models at a local and global level.
• Provides an in-depth exploration of key concepts across the ever-expanding environmental communications field.
• Examines the interaction between environmental and media communications at all levels.
• Provides a critical review of contemporary environmental communications literature and scholarship.
With key bibliographical references and further reading included alongside the entries, this innovative and accessible volume will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners alike.Note de contenu : .
TABLE OF CONTENTS
letter 1General Appeal|9 pages
entry |9 pages
General Introduction
letter 10A|21 pages
entry |2 pages
Access to Nature and Love of Nature: Case Study Ecotourism and Star Wars in Ireland
entry |3 pages
Case Study of Film Franchise, Star Wars: Ecotourism in Ireland and Skellig Michael
entry |3 pages
Advertising and Nature: How Environmental Issues are Projected in Media and PR
entry |3 pages
Affluence vs. Sustainable Consumption in Addressing Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Agency and Childhood Innocence in Animation: Promoting Environmental Activism: Case Study of FernGully and Princess Mononoke
entry |4 pages
Agenda Setting and News Media Coverage of Environmental Issues
entry |3 pages
Anthropomorphism, Human Love and the Personification of Animals: Blackfish
entry |4 pages
Anti-nuclear Modes of Environmental Thinking: Case Study of Chernobyl
entry |1 pages
Case Study of the Chernobyl Syndrome and the Rise of a Risk Society
entry |3 pages
Avant Garde Stories: Popularising Environmental Themes and Issues: Deseret
letter 31B|7 pages
entry |5 pages
Behaviour Change Communications (BCC) and Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Blue Humanities: Increasing Carbon and Waste Emissions
letter 38C|33 pages
entry |3 pages
Carbon Lock-in and Dealing with Stranded Assets: Communicating the Challenges
entry |3 pages
Circular Economy: Environmental Media, Inclusive and Just Transition – Snowpiercer
entry |3 pages
Circular Economy Finance and Its Limitations
entry |3 pages
Citizen Media Engagement and Strategies Used for Effective Audience Reception Studies
entry |3 pages
Climate Literacy and Environmental Activism: Ozark
entry |3 pages
Climate Markets and Cap and Trade as Practical Environmental-Economic Solutions
entry |2 pages
Cognitive Dissonance and Eco-modernism
entry |3 pages
Communication/Media Models Used for Environmental Communication
entry |2 pages
Community Engagement/Environmental Citizenship: ‘Change by Degrees’
entry |3 pages
Conservation as an Environmental Strategy Towards Evaluating Wilderness: Yellowstone
entry |3 pages
Case study of Yellowstone
entry |3 pages
Consumption and the Diderot Effect: Sustainable Reduction, Reuse and Recycle
entry |3 pages
Coronavirus: Health and Effective Communication of Climate Change – Contagion
entry |2 pages
Case study of Contagion
entry |4 pages
Creative Imaginary Used to Explore Solutions to Climate Change – Documentary 2040
entry |3 pages
Critical Theory and Environmental Communications
entry |2 pages
Critique of Historical Western Consumer Capitalism – Case Study of A Christmas Carol (BBC 1, Christmas 2019), adapted by Steven Knight (creator of Peaky Blinders)
letter 71D|7 pages
entry |3 pages
De-growth: Radical Solutions for Climate Change Stability
entry |3 pages
Democratic Deficit: From Techno-fix to Gaia – The War Narrative
entry |3 pages
Using the War Narrative to Help Address the So-called Democratic Deficit
letter 78E|37 pages
entry |4 pages
Ecological Modernism and Sustainable Development: Our Common Future in Crisis
entry |2 pages
Eco-villages – Case Study of Cloughjordan: An Irish Transitional and Sustainable Project
entry |3 pages
Ecocriticism and the Growth of Environmental Communication
entry |2 pages
Eco-materialism: Case Study of the Real Environmental Cost of Media Production
entry |3 pages
Material Turn in Ecocriticism: Environmental Cost of Globalised Media Production
entry |3 pages
Education Versus Disinformation: Promoting Environmental Literacy
entry |3 pages
Employment Opportunities: Feeding into Environmental Communications HE Courses
entry |3 pages
Enclosure Movement and Tragedy of the Commons
entry |2 pages
Post-colonial Enclosures, Eco-land Management and Cheap Nature
entry |2 pages
Energy Humanities: From Fossil Fuels to the Carbon Economy
entry |2 pages
Energy Landscapes and Media Perceptions: Case Study of NIMBYism in Ireland
entry |2 pages
Environmental Media Risk Campaigns: Best Practice Protocols
entry |4 pages
Environmental Citizenship as a Model of Engaging Humans Around Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: Case Study of India
entry |3 pages
Chipko Movement: A Case Study
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: A Case Study of Renewable Energy in Postcolonial Morocco
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: A Case Study of Uruguay (Victoria Gomez)
entry |2 pages
Environmental Justice – A Case Study of Representations of the Inuit Tribe in The Terror (Nora Doorley)
entry |4 pages
Environmental Management of the Media: Marrying Mindmapping and Carbon Footprinting
letter 115F|12 pages
entry |3 pages
Fake News and Environment Communication – The Social Dilemma
entry |4 pages
A Case Study of the Power of Online Fake News: The Social Dilemma (2020)
entry |3 pages
Fast Fashion, the ‘Third World’ and the Circular Economy
entry |2 pages
Free Press Theory Versus Social Responsibility Model of Media: Case Study of ClimateGate
entry |4 pages
Case Study of Climategate
letter 127G|16 pages
entry |1 pages
Green Transformation and Global Citizen Engagement – Green New Deal (Naomi Klein)
entry |3 pages
Naomi Klein's (American) Response to the Climate Crisis
entry |3 pages
Greening the Higher Education Curriculum: Drawing on the Power of Children's Media
entry |2 pages
Case Study of Children's TV and Environmental Media Education
entry |3 pages
Greening the Media: Drawing on Scholarship from New Environmental Media Journals
entry |4 pages
Greenwashing the Corporate and Media Industry: PR limitations and CSR
entry |6 pages
Greenwashing Lite: Celebrity Culture and Green Product Placement: Down to Earth
letter 143H|10 pages
entry |4 pages
Historical Environmental Representations of Communal Living: Happy as Lazzaro
entry |2 pages
Hippie Counter-Culture, Active Environmental Agency and Eco-spirituality – Leave No Trace
entry |3 pages
Leave No Trace – A Contemporary Back-to-Nature Environmental Parable
entry |4 pages
Human Rights Violation and Climate Change: Who Should Pay!
letter 153I|2 pages
entry |2 pages
Intersectionality and Eco-citizenship: Drawing on Race, Class, Gender and Ethnicity Debates
letter 155J|7 pages
entry |3 pages
Jevon's Paradox, Energy Efficiency and Its Environmental Application: Case Study of F1
entry |5 pages
Just Transition and Energy: From Fossil Fuels to Renewables – Peat Workers in Ireland
letter 162L|9 pages
entry |4 pages
Legal Representations of Environmental Agency: Case Studies of Dark Waters
entry |5 pages
Linguistic Discourse and Ecocriticism – Naming the Crisis!
entry |2 pages
Literary Tropes for Representing Low Carbon Futures
letter 171M|7 pages
entry |2 pages
Mediatisation of Climate Change with a Focus on Environmental Concerns
entry |3 pages
Media Coverage of Climate Change Debate: Triggers for Promoting Environmental Literacy
entry |2 pages
Multi-level Perspective (MLP) Analysis of Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Museums and Curating Exhibitions as a Model for Representations of Climate Change
letter 178N|15 pages
entry |2 pages
Native (Invader) Species: Representations and Effects on Bio-diversity
entry |3 pages
Natural Capital as a Business Response in Dealing with Climate Change
entry |7 pages
Nature Based Solutions – A Life on Our Planet
entry |4 pages
NIMBYism (Not in My Back Yard): Case Study of Renewable Energy (Windfarms)
entry |3 pages
Non-Conventional Environmental Activism: A Case Study of Woman at War
letter 193O|3 pages
entry |2 pages
Organic Signifiers of Communicating with a Natural Ecosystem – Tree of Life
entry |2 pages
Overton Window and Making Radical Political Environmental Decisions
letter 196P|12 pages
entry |2 pages
Pastoralism as a Model for Human's Love of Nature in Literature and Film
entry |2 pages
Peak Oil and ‘Keep it in the Ground’: Contested Environmental Debates
entry |2 pages
Petrofiction, Petrochemical Emissions: Reaching Dangerous Limits
entry |3 pages
Posthumanism and Ecological Thinking
entry |3 pages
Postmodernism and Climate Change Communication
entry |2 pages
Population Overshoot: Our Ecological Footprint and Loss of Biodiversity – Downsizing
entry |2 pages
Mapping Our Human Population History from an Ecological and Environmental Perspective
entry |3 pages
Case Study of Population Control Using the Science Fictional Tale – Downsizing
letter 208Q|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Queer Theorising and Nature: New Modes of Imagining Gender – Brokeback Mountain
letter 211R|13 pages
entry |3 pages
Regenerative Soil and Overcoming Desertification: Case Study of Kiss the Ground
entry |4 pages
Religious Fanaticism and Romanticisation of Nature: Case Study of A Hidden Life
entry |2 pages
Renewable Energy Debates and Critiques: Case Study of Planet of the Humans
entry |4 pages
Critique of Renewable Energy: Case Study of Planet of the Humans (2020)
entry |3 pages
Capitalism, Consumption and Growth
entry |2 pages
Risk Society and Climate Change
letter 224S|18 pages
entry |3 pages
Sensory Big Data and Art: Communicating through the Five Senses
entry |2 pages
Shock Doctrine and Pandemics: As a Precursor for the Climate Crisis
entry |3 pages
Sixth Extinction and Environmental Disasters
entry |3 pages
Slow Violence and Poverty: Lack of Equity in Representing Environmental Scholarship
entry |2 pages
Social Media and Climate Change Communication: A Tool for Innovation!
entry |5 pages
Spiritual Representations of Environmental Agency – First Reformed
entry |2 pages
Linking Environmental Action and Martyrdom – Calling on Religious and Racial Justice
entry |2 pages
Sustainable Communication and Environmental New Media Research
entry |2 pages
Sustainable Development Goal 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production
entry |3 pages
Sustainability Accounting (Dr Aideen O'Dochartaigh DCU)
letter 242T|5 pages
entry |2 pages
Tipping Points Around Climate Change Transformation – Audience Research
entry |3 pages
Case Study – Tipping Point in Media Coverage of Climate Change: Audiences Analysis
entry |2 pages
Transdisciplinary Research (TDR) and Environmental Communication
letter 247U|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Utopian Environmental Messaging: Lessons from Hollywood and Guides to Young People
letter 250V|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Veganism and Promoting Environmental Values Through Celebrity Endorsement
letter 253W|20 pages
entry |5 pages
Water Documentaries as Public Service Announcement (PSA) – Irish Water Conflict
entry |5 pages
Case Study – Water Public Service Announcement (PSA)
entry |3 pages
Weather Documentary Scholarship: Mediating Climate Change Effects and Public Opinion
entry |4 pages
Westerns Reflecting Deep Environmental Issues and Nature's Revenge – Wild River
entry |3 pages
Wind Energy: Storytelling, Renewable Energy and Community Adaptation
entry |3 pages
Case Study: Communicating a Renewable Energy Strategy for Low Carbon Transition (LCT)
entry |3 pages
World Bank (The) and Developing Effective Financial Environmental Communication
letter 273The Future of Environmental Communications|11 pages
entry |2 pages
Overview: The Great Derangement
entry |2 pages
Realos vs Fundis: Green Growth vs De-growth
entry |9 pages
Environmental Communications and the Future
You do not have access to this content currently. Please click 'Get Access' button to see if you or your institution have access to this content.
To purchase a print version of this book for personal use or request an inspection copy
METRICS.En ligne : https://images.tandf.co.uk/common/jackets/crclarge/978100312/9781003123422.jpg Essential concepts of environmental communication : An A-Z Guide [texte imprimé] / Pat Brereton, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Routledge studies in environmental communication and media, 2022 . - 283p. : ill. ; 23.5cmx 15.5cm.
ISBN : 978-0-367-64202-0
Langues : Anglais (eng) Langues originales : Anglais (eng)
Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé : .
This book draws on a broad spectrum of environmental communications and related cross-disciplinary literature to help students and scholars grasp the interconnecting key concepts within this ever-expanding field of study. Aligning climate change and environmental learning through media and communications, particularly taking into account the post-COVID challenge of sustainability, remains one of the most important concerns within environmental communications. Addressing this challenge, Essential Concepts for Environmental Communication synthesises summary writings from a broad range of environmental theorists, while teasing out provocative concepts and key ideas that frame this evolving, multi-disciplinary field. Each entry maps out an important concept or environmental idea and illustrates how it relates more broadly across the growing field of environmental communication debates. Included in this volume is a full section dedicated to exploring what environmental communication might look like in a post-COVID setting:
• Offers cutting-edge analysis of the current state of environmental communications.
• Presents an up-to-date exploration of environmental and sustainable development models at a local and global level.
• Provides an in-depth exploration of key concepts across the ever-expanding environmental communications field.
• Examines the interaction between environmental and media communications at all levels.
• Provides a critical review of contemporary environmental communications literature and scholarship.
With key bibliographical references and further reading included alongside the entries, this innovative and accessible volume will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners alike.Note de contenu : .
TABLE OF CONTENTS
letter 1General Appeal|9 pages
entry |9 pages
General Introduction
letter 10A|21 pages
entry |2 pages
Access to Nature and Love of Nature: Case Study Ecotourism and Star Wars in Ireland
entry |3 pages
Case Study of Film Franchise, Star Wars: Ecotourism in Ireland and Skellig Michael
entry |3 pages
Advertising and Nature: How Environmental Issues are Projected in Media and PR
entry |3 pages
Affluence vs. Sustainable Consumption in Addressing Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Agency and Childhood Innocence in Animation: Promoting Environmental Activism: Case Study of FernGully and Princess Mononoke
entry |4 pages
Agenda Setting and News Media Coverage of Environmental Issues
entry |3 pages
Anthropomorphism, Human Love and the Personification of Animals: Blackfish
entry |4 pages
Anti-nuclear Modes of Environmental Thinking: Case Study of Chernobyl
entry |1 pages
Case Study of the Chernobyl Syndrome and the Rise of a Risk Society
entry |3 pages
Avant Garde Stories: Popularising Environmental Themes and Issues: Deseret
letter 31B|7 pages
entry |5 pages
Behaviour Change Communications (BCC) and Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Blue Humanities: Increasing Carbon and Waste Emissions
letter 38C|33 pages
entry |3 pages
Carbon Lock-in and Dealing with Stranded Assets: Communicating the Challenges
entry |3 pages
Circular Economy: Environmental Media, Inclusive and Just Transition – Snowpiercer
entry |3 pages
Circular Economy Finance and Its Limitations
entry |3 pages
Citizen Media Engagement and Strategies Used for Effective Audience Reception Studies
entry |3 pages
Climate Literacy and Environmental Activism: Ozark
entry |3 pages
Climate Markets and Cap and Trade as Practical Environmental-Economic Solutions
entry |2 pages
Cognitive Dissonance and Eco-modernism
entry |3 pages
Communication/Media Models Used for Environmental Communication
entry |2 pages
Community Engagement/Environmental Citizenship: ‘Change by Degrees’
entry |3 pages
Conservation as an Environmental Strategy Towards Evaluating Wilderness: Yellowstone
entry |3 pages
Case study of Yellowstone
entry |3 pages
Consumption and the Diderot Effect: Sustainable Reduction, Reuse and Recycle
entry |3 pages
Coronavirus: Health and Effective Communication of Climate Change – Contagion
entry |2 pages
Case study of Contagion
entry |4 pages
Creative Imaginary Used to Explore Solutions to Climate Change – Documentary 2040
entry |3 pages
Critical Theory and Environmental Communications
entry |2 pages
Critique of Historical Western Consumer Capitalism – Case Study of A Christmas Carol (BBC 1, Christmas 2019), adapted by Steven Knight (creator of Peaky Blinders)
letter 71D|7 pages
entry |3 pages
De-growth: Radical Solutions for Climate Change Stability
entry |3 pages
Democratic Deficit: From Techno-fix to Gaia – The War Narrative
entry |3 pages
Using the War Narrative to Help Address the So-called Democratic Deficit
letter 78E|37 pages
entry |4 pages
Ecological Modernism and Sustainable Development: Our Common Future in Crisis
entry |2 pages
Eco-villages – Case Study of Cloughjordan: An Irish Transitional and Sustainable Project
entry |3 pages
Ecocriticism and the Growth of Environmental Communication
entry |2 pages
Eco-materialism: Case Study of the Real Environmental Cost of Media Production
entry |3 pages
Material Turn in Ecocriticism: Environmental Cost of Globalised Media Production
entry |3 pages
Education Versus Disinformation: Promoting Environmental Literacy
entry |3 pages
Employment Opportunities: Feeding into Environmental Communications HE Courses
entry |3 pages
Enclosure Movement and Tragedy of the Commons
entry |2 pages
Post-colonial Enclosures, Eco-land Management and Cheap Nature
entry |2 pages
Energy Humanities: From Fossil Fuels to the Carbon Economy
entry |2 pages
Energy Landscapes and Media Perceptions: Case Study of NIMBYism in Ireland
entry |2 pages
Environmental Media Risk Campaigns: Best Practice Protocols
entry |4 pages
Environmental Citizenship as a Model of Engaging Humans Around Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: Case Study of India
entry |3 pages
Chipko Movement: A Case Study
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: A Case Study of Renewable Energy in Postcolonial Morocco
entry |3 pages
Environmental Justice: A Case Study of Uruguay (Victoria Gomez)
entry |2 pages
Environmental Justice – A Case Study of Representations of the Inuit Tribe in The Terror (Nora Doorley)
entry |4 pages
Environmental Management of the Media: Marrying Mindmapping and Carbon Footprinting
letter 115F|12 pages
entry |3 pages
Fake News and Environment Communication – The Social Dilemma
entry |4 pages
A Case Study of the Power of Online Fake News: The Social Dilemma (2020)
entry |3 pages
Fast Fashion, the ‘Third World’ and the Circular Economy
entry |2 pages
Free Press Theory Versus Social Responsibility Model of Media: Case Study of ClimateGate
entry |4 pages
Case Study of Climategate
letter 127G|16 pages
entry |1 pages
Green Transformation and Global Citizen Engagement – Green New Deal (Naomi Klein)
entry |3 pages
Naomi Klein's (American) Response to the Climate Crisis
entry |3 pages
Greening the Higher Education Curriculum: Drawing on the Power of Children's Media
entry |2 pages
Case Study of Children's TV and Environmental Media Education
entry |3 pages
Greening the Media: Drawing on Scholarship from New Environmental Media Journals
entry |4 pages
Greenwashing the Corporate and Media Industry: PR limitations and CSR
entry |6 pages
Greenwashing Lite: Celebrity Culture and Green Product Placement: Down to Earth
letter 143H|10 pages
entry |4 pages
Historical Environmental Representations of Communal Living: Happy as Lazzaro
entry |2 pages
Hippie Counter-Culture, Active Environmental Agency and Eco-spirituality – Leave No Trace
entry |3 pages
Leave No Trace – A Contemporary Back-to-Nature Environmental Parable
entry |4 pages
Human Rights Violation and Climate Change: Who Should Pay!
letter 153I|2 pages
entry |2 pages
Intersectionality and Eco-citizenship: Drawing on Race, Class, Gender and Ethnicity Debates
letter 155J|7 pages
entry |3 pages
Jevon's Paradox, Energy Efficiency and Its Environmental Application: Case Study of F1
entry |5 pages
Just Transition and Energy: From Fossil Fuels to Renewables – Peat Workers in Ireland
letter 162L|9 pages
entry |4 pages
Legal Representations of Environmental Agency: Case Studies of Dark Waters
entry |5 pages
Linguistic Discourse and Ecocriticism – Naming the Crisis!
entry |2 pages
Literary Tropes for Representing Low Carbon Futures
letter 171M|7 pages
entry |2 pages
Mediatisation of Climate Change with a Focus on Environmental Concerns
entry |3 pages
Media Coverage of Climate Change Debate: Triggers for Promoting Environmental Literacy
entry |2 pages
Multi-level Perspective (MLP) Analysis of Climate Change
entry |3 pages
Museums and Curating Exhibitions as a Model for Representations of Climate Change
letter 178N|15 pages
entry |2 pages
Native (Invader) Species: Representations and Effects on Bio-diversity
entry |3 pages
Natural Capital as a Business Response in Dealing with Climate Change
entry |7 pages
Nature Based Solutions – A Life on Our Planet
entry |4 pages
NIMBYism (Not in My Back Yard): Case Study of Renewable Energy (Windfarms)
entry |3 pages
Non-Conventional Environmental Activism: A Case Study of Woman at War
letter 193O|3 pages
entry |2 pages
Organic Signifiers of Communicating with a Natural Ecosystem – Tree of Life
entry |2 pages
Overton Window and Making Radical Political Environmental Decisions
letter 196P|12 pages
entry |2 pages
Pastoralism as a Model for Human's Love of Nature in Literature and Film
entry |2 pages
Peak Oil and ‘Keep it in the Ground’: Contested Environmental Debates
entry |2 pages
Petrofiction, Petrochemical Emissions: Reaching Dangerous Limits
entry |3 pages
Posthumanism and Ecological Thinking
entry |3 pages
Postmodernism and Climate Change Communication
entry |2 pages
Population Overshoot: Our Ecological Footprint and Loss of Biodiversity – Downsizing
entry |2 pages
Mapping Our Human Population History from an Ecological and Environmental Perspective
entry |3 pages
Case Study of Population Control Using the Science Fictional Tale – Downsizing
letter 208Q|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Queer Theorising and Nature: New Modes of Imagining Gender – Brokeback Mountain
letter 211R|13 pages
entry |3 pages
Regenerative Soil and Overcoming Desertification: Case Study of Kiss the Ground
entry |4 pages
Religious Fanaticism and Romanticisation of Nature: Case Study of A Hidden Life
entry |2 pages
Renewable Energy Debates and Critiques: Case Study of Planet of the Humans
entry |4 pages
Critique of Renewable Energy: Case Study of Planet of the Humans (2020)
entry |3 pages
Capitalism, Consumption and Growth
entry |2 pages
Risk Society and Climate Change
letter 224S|18 pages
entry |3 pages
Sensory Big Data and Art: Communicating through the Five Senses
entry |2 pages
Shock Doctrine and Pandemics: As a Precursor for the Climate Crisis
entry |3 pages
Sixth Extinction and Environmental Disasters
entry |3 pages
Slow Violence and Poverty: Lack of Equity in Representing Environmental Scholarship
entry |2 pages
Social Media and Climate Change Communication: A Tool for Innovation!
entry |5 pages
Spiritual Representations of Environmental Agency – First Reformed
entry |2 pages
Linking Environmental Action and Martyrdom – Calling on Religious and Racial Justice
entry |2 pages
Sustainable Communication and Environmental New Media Research
entry |2 pages
Sustainable Development Goal 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production
entry |3 pages
Sustainability Accounting (Dr Aideen O'Dochartaigh DCU)
letter 242T|5 pages
entry |2 pages
Tipping Points Around Climate Change Transformation – Audience Research
entry |3 pages
Case Study – Tipping Point in Media Coverage of Climate Change: Audiences Analysis
entry |2 pages
Transdisciplinary Research (TDR) and Environmental Communication
letter 247U|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Utopian Environmental Messaging: Lessons from Hollywood and Guides to Young People
letter 250V|3 pages
entry |3 pages
Veganism and Promoting Environmental Values Through Celebrity Endorsement
letter 253W|20 pages
entry |5 pages
Water Documentaries as Public Service Announcement (PSA) – Irish Water Conflict
entry |5 pages
Case Study – Water Public Service Announcement (PSA)
entry |3 pages
Weather Documentary Scholarship: Mediating Climate Change Effects and Public Opinion
entry |4 pages
Westerns Reflecting Deep Environmental Issues and Nature's Revenge – Wild River
entry |3 pages
Wind Energy: Storytelling, Renewable Energy and Community Adaptation
entry |3 pages
Case Study: Communicating a Renewable Energy Strategy for Low Carbon Transition (LCT)
entry |3 pages
World Bank (The) and Developing Effective Financial Environmental Communication
letter 273The Future of Environmental Communications|11 pages
entry |2 pages
Overview: The Great Derangement
entry |2 pages
Realos vs Fundis: Green Growth vs De-growth
entry |9 pages
Environmental Communications and the Future
You do not have access to this content currently. Please click 'Get Access' button to see if you or your institution have access to this content.
To purchase a print version of this book for personal use or request an inspection copy
METRICS.En ligne : https://images.tandf.co.uk/common/jackets/crclarge/978100312/9781003123422.jpg Réservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 23/323141 L/363.046 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 23/323140 L/363.046 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible Pour une alimentation durable / Bricas Nicolas
Titre : Pour une alimentation durable : Réflexion stratégique duALIne Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Bricas Nicolas, Auteur Editeur : Versailles : Quae Année de publication : 2011 Importance : 285p. Présentation : ill. Format : 21x 15cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-2-7592-1670-3 Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Français (fre) Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé :
Comment nourrir le monde aujourd’hui et dans la perspective démographique du XXIe siècle ? Peu traités du point de vue de leur durabilité, les régimes alimentaires mondiaux ont laissé pour l’instant la priorité des réflexions aux défis pour l’agriculture. L’« alimentation durable » est pourtant sans conteste un thème majeur pour les années qui viennent. L’Inra et le Cirad ont mobilisé les experts francophones du secteur pour étudier les tendances d’évolution des systèmes alimentaires au niveau mondial, au regard de leurs effets sur l’environnement, la santé, l’équité sociale et l’économie. La réflexion menée au sein de duALIne a permis, au travers d’entrées choisies en fonction de leurs liens et impacts potentiels sur la durabilité de l’alimentation, de dresser un état des lieux des déterminants majeurs qui ont présidé aux évolutions passées des systèmes alimentaires, d’identifier les points critiques de ces systèmes, et enfin, de dégager des questions à la recherche pour de futurs programmes. Cet ouvrage intéressera les décideurs ainsi que toutes les parties prenantes du domaine de l’alimentationNote de contenu :
Sommaire:
Avant-propos
Remerciements
1-De nouveaux enjeux pour les systèmes alimentaires
2-Consommation et consommateurs
3-Impact carbone et qualité nutritionnelle des régimes alimentaires en france
4-Systéme alimentaires
5-Organisation industrielle et durabilité
6-Urbanisation et durabilité des systèmes alimentaires
7-Pertes et gaspillages
8-Commerce international,volatilité des prix et standards durables
9-Eléments de réflexion prospective sur l'alimentation durable
10-Méthodes d'évaluation,panorama critique
Conclusion
Références bibliographiques
AnnexePour une alimentation durable : Réflexion stratégique duALIne [texte imprimé] / Bricas Nicolas, Auteur . - Versailles : Quae, 2011 . - 285p. : ill. ; 21x 15cm.
ISBN : 978-2-7592-1670-3
Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Français (fre)
Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé :
Comment nourrir le monde aujourd’hui et dans la perspective démographique du XXIe siècle ? Peu traités du point de vue de leur durabilité, les régimes alimentaires mondiaux ont laissé pour l’instant la priorité des réflexions aux défis pour l’agriculture. L’« alimentation durable » est pourtant sans conteste un thème majeur pour les années qui viennent. L’Inra et le Cirad ont mobilisé les experts francophones du secteur pour étudier les tendances d’évolution des systèmes alimentaires au niveau mondial, au regard de leurs effets sur l’environnement, la santé, l’équité sociale et l’économie. La réflexion menée au sein de duALIne a permis, au travers d’entrées choisies en fonction de leurs liens et impacts potentiels sur la durabilité de l’alimentation, de dresser un état des lieux des déterminants majeurs qui ont présidé aux évolutions passées des systèmes alimentaires, d’identifier les points critiques de ces systèmes, et enfin, de dégager des questions à la recherche pour de futurs programmes. Cet ouvrage intéressera les décideurs ainsi que toutes les parties prenantes du domaine de l’alimentationNote de contenu :
Sommaire:
Avant-propos
Remerciements
1-De nouveaux enjeux pour les systèmes alimentaires
2-Consommation et consommateurs
3-Impact carbone et qualité nutritionnelle des régimes alimentaires en france
4-Systéme alimentaires
5-Organisation industrielle et durabilité
6-Urbanisation et durabilité des systèmes alimentaires
7-Pertes et gaspillages
8-Commerce international,volatilité des prix et standards durables
9-Eléments de réflexion prospective sur l'alimentation durable
10-Méthodes d'évaluation,panorama critique
Conclusion
Références bibliographiques
AnnexeRéservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (4)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 18/306214 L/363.030 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306215 L/363.030 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306216 L/363.030 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306217 L/363.030 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible Quel futur pour notre alimentation ? / Pierre Feillet
Titre : Quel futur pour notre alimentation ? Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Pierre Feillet, Auteur Editeur : Versailles : Quae Année de publication : 2014 Collection : Enjeux Sciences Importance : 1 vol. (165 p.) Format : 19 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-2-7592-2153-0 Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Français (fre) Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé :
-Dans un monde qui change profondément, le grand défi du xxie siècle est de garantir à tous les hommes de l'eau et de la nourriture en quantité suffisante et de bonne qualité. Les scientifiques, les agriculteurs et les industriels doivent gagner le pari de l'innovation pour répondre à ce défi.
-Comment seront produits, transformés et commercialisés nos aliments au cours des prochaines décennies ? Ce voyage dans le futur débute dans les champs avec les nouvelles semences et se termine dans nos assiettes et nos estomacs. Au fil des pages, le lecteur découvrira des agricultures « durablement productives », respectueuses de l'environnement, la place que pourraient occuper les organismes génétiquement modifiés, l'urgence à réduire les pertes de denrées alimentaires, le recours à des microorganismes et des algues, voire des insectes, pour fabriquer les briques élémentaires (protéines, lipides, vitamines) de notre nourriture. Il s'étonnera peut-être que la qualité sanitaire de l'alimentation ira en s'améliorant avec l'inéluctable développement de l'industrie alimentaire pour nourrir des villes toujours plus grandes. Il apprendra que l'étude des populations bactériennes colonisant notre tube digestif et l'approfondissement des liens qui unissent nos gènes et notre alimentation ouvrent de nouveaux horizons à la conception d'aliments bénéfiques à la santé. Il pourra se préparer à faire ses courses autrement et espérer, avec l'auteur, que plaisir et convivialité resteront les marqueurs de notre alimentation.Note de contenu :
Sommaire:
1.A quelles évolutions de la planète faut-il faire face?
La population s’accroît, vieillit et s’urbanise
L’explosion des classes moyennes modifie la demande alimentaire
La terre se réchauffe
L’impact négatif des pratiques agricoles sur l’environnement doit diminuer
Les ressources en terres cultivables, en eau, en phosphates et en énergie sont limitées
2. Comment promouvoir des agricultures durablement productives ?
Produire plus et durablement
Utiliser des organismes génétiquement modifiés
Diminuer les pertes après récolte
Maîtriser la spéculation sur l’alimentation
3. Des usines remplaceront-elles la Terre nourricière ?
Les chimistes fabriquent des molécules alimentaires
Les biotechnologies ouvrent de nouveaux horizons aux industriels
Les insectes seront peut-être une nouvelle source de protéines alimentaires
4.Mangerons-nous autrement ?
La qualité sanitaire des aliments s’améliore, surtout dans les villes
Les aliments agissent plus activement et plus précisément sur notre santé
Les pratiques de consommation évoluent
Innover pour nourrir les hommesQuel futur pour notre alimentation ? [texte imprimé] / Pierre Feillet, Auteur . - Versailles : Quae, 2014 . - 1 vol. (165 p.) ; 19 cm. - (Enjeux Sciences) .
ISBN : 978-2-7592-2153-0
Langues : Français (fre) Langues originales : Français (fre)
Index. décimale : 363 - Autres problèmes et services sociaux Résumé :
-Dans un monde qui change profondément, le grand défi du xxie siècle est de garantir à tous les hommes de l'eau et de la nourriture en quantité suffisante et de bonne qualité. Les scientifiques, les agriculteurs et les industriels doivent gagner le pari de l'innovation pour répondre à ce défi.
-Comment seront produits, transformés et commercialisés nos aliments au cours des prochaines décennies ? Ce voyage dans le futur débute dans les champs avec les nouvelles semences et se termine dans nos assiettes et nos estomacs. Au fil des pages, le lecteur découvrira des agricultures « durablement productives », respectueuses de l'environnement, la place que pourraient occuper les organismes génétiquement modifiés, l'urgence à réduire les pertes de denrées alimentaires, le recours à des microorganismes et des algues, voire des insectes, pour fabriquer les briques élémentaires (protéines, lipides, vitamines) de notre nourriture. Il s'étonnera peut-être que la qualité sanitaire de l'alimentation ira en s'améliorant avec l'inéluctable développement de l'industrie alimentaire pour nourrir des villes toujours plus grandes. Il apprendra que l'étude des populations bactériennes colonisant notre tube digestif et l'approfondissement des liens qui unissent nos gènes et notre alimentation ouvrent de nouveaux horizons à la conception d'aliments bénéfiques à la santé. Il pourra se préparer à faire ses courses autrement et espérer, avec l'auteur, que plaisir et convivialité resteront les marqueurs de notre alimentation.Note de contenu :
Sommaire:
1.A quelles évolutions de la planète faut-il faire face?
La population s’accroît, vieillit et s’urbanise
L’explosion des classes moyennes modifie la demande alimentaire
La terre se réchauffe
L’impact négatif des pratiques agricoles sur l’environnement doit diminuer
Les ressources en terres cultivables, en eau, en phosphates et en énergie sont limitées
2. Comment promouvoir des agricultures durablement productives ?
Produire plus et durablement
Utiliser des organismes génétiquement modifiés
Diminuer les pertes après récolte
Maîtriser la spéculation sur l’alimentation
3. Des usines remplaceront-elles la Terre nourricière ?
Les chimistes fabriquent des molécules alimentaires
Les biotechnologies ouvrent de nouveaux horizons aux industriels
Les insectes seront peut-être une nouvelle source de protéines alimentaires
4.Mangerons-nous autrement ?
La qualité sanitaire des aliments s’améliore, surtout dans les villes
Les aliments agissent plus activement et plus précisément sur notre santé
Les pratiques de consommation évoluent
Innover pour nourrir les hommesRéservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (4)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 18/306220 L/363.031 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306221 L/363.031 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306222 L/363.031 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible 18/306223 L/363.031 Livre Bibliothèque Science de la nature et de la vie et sciences de la terre et de l'univers indéterminé Disponible