Urban Communication Reader

Urban Communication Reader
Author: Harvey Jassem
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre: City and town life
ISBN: 9781572739499

Probes different topics from different directions, and direct readers toward a common urban orientation to produce new insights into urban communication. Topics include: changes in the use of urban land; changes in media technology; the impact of events on spaces and places from sports to natural disasters; the urban function of advertising, commerce, health and community attachment; and reflections on the traditional geographical role of streets and amid the newly emerging virtual places created by the internet.

Urban Communication Reader IV

Urban Communication Reader IV
Author: erin daina mcclellan
Publisher: Urban Communication
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021
Genre: Cities and towns
ISBN: 9781433181566

This volume provides a collection of urban communication research that historically examines, presently analyzes, and creatively imagines the future of cities as change agents.

Communicative Cities in the 21st Century

Communicative Cities in the 21st Century
Author: Matthew D. Matsaganis
Publisher: Urban Communication
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Cities and towns
ISBN: 9781433122590

This book explores the concept of the «communicative city», developed initially by participants in an international Urban Communication Foundation initiative, by bringing together scholars from across the communication arts and sciences seeking to enhance our understanding of the dynamic relationship between urban residents and their social, physical, mediated, and built environments. The chapters are arranged in categories that speak to two larger themes: first, they all speak to at least one aspect of the qualifying and/or disqualifying characteristics of a communicative city. A second, larger theme is what we might refer to as a master trope of the urban experience and, indeed, of urban communication: inside/outside. The research presented here represents social scientific and humanistic approaches to communication, quantitative and qualitative methodologies, and positivist/normative and interpretive orientations, thereby providing a deeper understanding of the multi-level phenomena that unfold in urban communities.

The Urban Communication Reader

The Urban Communication Reader
Author: Gene Burd
Publisher: Hampton Press (NJ)
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2007
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Explores the notion that the push toward marketization is the central force restructuring the communications landscape. This book examines the consequences of this development for the constitution of public culture. It analyzes the core institutional processes of marketization.

Urban Communication Systems

Urban Communication Systems
Author: Leo W. Jeffres
Publisher: Hampton Press (NJ)
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2002
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN:

This is a call for more research into urban systems in general and communication patterns in particular within geographically defined units of analysis. It treats the urban system as the focus in its attempt to integrate the literature from communication with other disciplines focusing on cities.

The Sustainability Communication Reader

The Sustainability Communication Reader
Author: Franzisca Weder
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 592
Release: 2021-03-12
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 365831883X

The Textbook seeks for an innovative approach to Sustainability Communication as transdisciplinary area of research. Following the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, which are intended to transform the world as it is known, we seek for a multidisciplinary discussion of the role communication plays in realizing these goals. With complementing theoretical approaches and concepts, the book offers various perspectives on communication practices and strategies on an individual, organizational, institutional, as well as public level that contribute, enable (or hinder) sustainable development. Presented case studies show methodological as well as issue specific challenges in sustainability communication. Therefore, the book introduces and promotes innovative methods for this specific area of research.

Promoting Urban Social Justice through Engaged Communication Scholarship

Promoting Urban Social Justice through Engaged Communication Scholarship
Author: George Villanueva
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2021-09-20
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000437124

Based on the author’s scholar-activist interventions to promote social justice in cities, this book highlights the role engaged communication scholarship can play in fostering a more equitable future. Through three innovative case studies situated in South Los Angeles, the book illustrates engaged communication scholarship projects grounded in design criteria that are social justice-oriented, place-based, collaborative, and public. It models university-community partnerships that promote positive social change in marginalized communities that stand to benefit the most from university resources, guiding readers in how these partnerships can be incorporated into social justice-oriented curriculum and engaged learning projects. It provides strategic recommendations for how "in community" communication research and media practices can be used to build local power in marginalized urban neighborhoods, and calls for communication’s research, pedagogy, epistemologies, practices, ethics, politics, and community engagement to purposefully serve the concerns of marginalized groups in society. The book will be of interest to researchers and social change practitioners interested in solution-oriented work in cities within the fields of research methods, organizational communication, urban planning, public policy, sociology, and social work.