This book shows how place-based organizing and community action can solve complex problems like long-term recovery after disaster. Jack L. Harris proposes a framework for expanding interorganizational collaborations with communities after disaster through changes in government disaster policy and institutional messages.
This book shows how place-based organizing and community action can solve complex problems like long-term recovery after disaster. Jack L. Harris proposes a framework for expanding interorganizational collaborations with communities after disaster through changes in government disaster policy and institutional messages.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
Environmental Communication and Nature: Conflict and Ecoculture in the Anthropocene
Jack L. Harris is visiting assistant professor of communication and summer internship director at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Dedication Acknowledgements Introduction: Perpetual Disaster Response and Recovery: the New Normal? Chapter 1: Communicating and Organizing after Disaster Chapter 2: How Public Policy Shapes the Organizational Landscape of Disaster Recovery Chapter 3: Writing Community Back into Disaster Recovery: Hyperlocal Organizing and Interorganizational Relationships Chapter 4: Using Stakeholder Theory to Build Theories of Hyperlocal Organizing Chapter 5: Hyperlocal Organizing after Hurricane Sandy: The View from Coastal New Jersey and Staten Island New York Chapter 6: Empowering Community through Hyperlocal Organizing: Implications for Social Resilience and Democratic Governance Appendix A Appendix B References About the Author
Table of Contents Dedication Acknowledgements Introduction: Perpetual Disaster Response and Recovery: the New Normal? Chapter 1: Communicating and Organizing after Disaster Chapter 2: How Public Policy Shapes the Organizational Landscape of Disaster Recovery Chapter 3: Writing Community Back into Disaster Recovery: Hyperlocal Organizing and Interorganizational Relationships Chapter 4: Using Stakeholder Theory to Build Theories of Hyperlocal Organizing Chapter 5: Hyperlocal Organizing after Hurricane Sandy: The View from Coastal New Jersey and Staten Island New York Chapter 6: Empowering Community through Hyperlocal Organizing: Implications for Social Resilience and Democratic Governance Appendix A Appendix B References About the Author
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