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Book Titles No access
Mapping Environmental Risk and Energy Communication
Ecoculture in Energy Risk- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2024
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2024
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-6669-2648-4
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-6669-2649-1
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 160
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
ChapterPages
- Contents No access
- Figures No access
- Tables No access
- Energy, Environmental Risk, and Public Participation No access
- Ecolinguistics: Storylines, Frames, and Ideologies: Rhetorical Approaches to Risk (Is/ Ought) No access
- Destructive Discourses No access
- Positive and Beneficial Discourses No access
- Participant Selection No access
- Critical Literacies and Environmental Risk Assessment No access
- Methodology and Methods No access
- Notes No access
- Historical Concept of “Environmental Identities” in Each State No access
- New York—Environment as Wilderness No access
- Pennsylvania—Environment as Resource and Recreation No access
- Current State Identities—Energy No access
- Notes No access
- Deliberation: Participatory Risk Mechanisms through Environmental Risk Assessments No access
- Competing Science Claims and HVHF Discourse No access
- Neoliberalism and HVHF discourse No access
- Discourse Legitimation Patterns No access
- Rhetorical Analysis Methods: Is/Ought Constructions and Stasis No access
- Lack of Access to Public Meetings No access
- Lack of Access within Public Meetings No access
- Lack of Access on Institutional Sites No access
- Ohio No access
- Pennsylvania No access
- Ohio No access
- Pennsylvania No access
- Ohio No access
- Pennsylvania No access
- Stasis II: HVHF Drilling Contamination Risks—Water and Soil No access
- Ohio No access
- Ohio No access
- Ohio No access
- Pennsylvania No access
- Significance of Institutional Environmental Authority Based on Stasis Analysis No access
- CDA Coding No access
- Legitimation No access
- Economic Rationalism Discourse Patterns—Metaphors/Erasures No access
- Notes No access
- Positive and Beneficial Discourses in Ohio and Pennsylvania—Salience and Re-minding No access
- In Response: Activist Technical Networks No access
- Social Media as Technical Networks of Environmental Risk No access
- New York No access
- Pennsylvania No access
- Narrative Representations of Environmental Risk No access
- Notes No access
- Post-positivist Notions of Science: Justice and Precaution—Considering Public Health No access
- Interventions: Counter-Literacies Leading to a New York Ban on HVHF No access
- Notes No access
- New York No access
- Ohio and Pennsylvania No access
- Limitations and Future Study Possibilities No access
- Interviews and Observations (Three to three and a half hours in one day) No access
- Interview Questions, Set 1: Reporting Risks within Local, State and Federal Risk Reporting Sites (30–45 Minutes) No access
- Tap No access
- Interview Questions, Set 2 (30–45 minutes) No access
- Think-Aloud Protocol 2 (45 min–1 hour) No access
- Local, State, and Federal Risk Reporting Agencies No access
- Note No access
- References No access Pages 139 - 150
- Index No access Pages 151 - 158
- About the Author No access Pages 159 - 160





