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  • Wissenschaftspark Albert Einstein  (1)
  • Hertie School  (1)
  • 2015-2019  (2)
  • 2019  (2)
  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Cambridge ; Medford :polity,
    UID:
    almahu_BV046208682
    Format: vii, 152 Seiten.
    ISBN: 978-1-5095-3419-7 , 978-1-5095-3420-3
    Content: The Anthropocene has become central to understanding the intimate connections between human life and the natural environment, but it has fractured our sense of time and possibility. What implications does that fracturing have for how we should think about politics in these new times? In this cutting-edge intervention, Duncan Kelly considers how this new geological era could shape our future by engaging with the recent past of our political thinking. If politics remains a short-term affair governed by electoral cycles, could an Anthropocenic sense of time, value and prosperity be built into it, altering long-established views about abundance, energy and growth? Is the Anthropocene so disruptive that it is no more than a harbinger of ecological doom, or can modern politics adapt by rethinking older debates about states, territories, and populations? Kelly rejects both pessimistic fatalism about humanity’s demise, and an optimistic fatalism that makes the Anthropocene into a problem too big for politics, best left to the market or technology to solve. His skilful defence of the potential for democratic politics to negotiate this challenge is an indispensable guide to the ideas that matter most to understanding this epochal transformation
    Note: Literaturhinweise: Seite 123-147
    Language: English
    Subjects: Political Science , General works
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Anthropozän ; Humanökologie ; Politische Ökologie ; Umweltökonomie
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1666135216
    Format: x, 637 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9781928096726 , 9781928096733
    Content: Twenty-five years after the Rwanda genocide, there is still much to learn about the role the media played as similar tragedies continue to unfold today. When human beings are at their worst — as they most certainly were in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide — the world needs the institutions of journalism and the media to be at their best. Sadly, in Rwanda, the media fell short. Media and Mass Atrocity revisits the case of Rwanda, but also examines how the nexus between media and mass atrocity has been shaped by the dramatic rise of social media. It has been twenty-five years since Rwanda slid into the abyss. The killings happened in broad daylight, but many of us turned away. A quarter century later, there is still much to learn about the relationship between the media and genocide, an issue laid bare by the Rwanda tragedy. The book revisits the debate over the role of traditional news media in Rwanda, where, confronted by the horrors taking place, international news media, for the most part, turned away, and at times muddled the story when they did pay attention. Hate-media outlets in Rwanda played a role in laying the groundwork for genocide, and then actively encouraged the extermination campaign. The news media not only failed to fully grasp and communicate the genocide, but mostly overlooked the war crimes committed during the genocide and in its aftermath by the Rwandan Patriotic Front. The global media landscape has been transformed since Rwanda. We are now saturated with social media, generated as often as not by non-journalists. Mobile phones are everywhere. And in many quarters, the traditional news media business model continues to recede. Against that backdrop, it is more important than ever to examine the nexus between media and mass atrocity. The book includes an extensive section on the echoes of Rwanda, which looks at the cases of Darfur, the Central African Republic, Myanmar, and South Sudan, while the impact of social media as a new actor is examined through chapters on social media use by the Islamic State and in Syria and in other contexts across the developing world. It also looks at the aftermath of the genocide: the shifting narrative of the genocide itself, the evolving debate over the role and impact of hate media in Rwanda, the challenge of digitizing archival records of the genocide, and the fostering of free and independent media in atrocity's wake. The volume also probes how journalists themselves confront mass atrocity and examines the preventive function of media through the use of advanced digital technology as well as radio programming in the Lake Chad Basin and the Democratic Republic of Congo.--Publisher's description
    Note: Literaturangaben
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781928096757
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781928096740
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Thompson, Allan, 1963- Media and mass atrocity Waterloo, Ontario : Centre for International Governance Innovation, 2019 ISBN 1928096751
    Language: English
    Author information: Dallaire, Roméo 1946-
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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