1st Edition

Environmental Risk and the Press

Edited By Peter M. Sandman Copyright 1987
164 Pages
by Routledge

166 Pages
by Routledge

166 Pages
by Routledge

Toxic spills, acid rain, poor air quality-scarcely a day goes by without a report in the press on an environmental risk issue. Nowhere is this more prevalent than in New Jersey, a leading state in the production of chemicals, and the state with the largest number of Superfund cleanup sites. How accurate and how extensive is environmental risk reporting in the New Jersey press, and what can be done... Read more
List of Tables, Preface, Introduction, Phase One: Evaluating Environmental Risk Reporting, 1. The Archive of Environmental Risk Reporting, 2. Content Analysis of the Environmental Risk Archive, 3. Expert Analysis of the Environmental Risk Archive, 4. How Good is the Best?, Phase Two: Exploring Ways To Improve News Coverage of Environmental Risk, 5. Methods for Determining the Attitudes of Environmental Reporters and Their Sources, 6. Attitudes toward Environmental Risk Information, 7. Options for Providing Environmental Risk Information to the Media, 8. Meeting the Information Needs of Reporters, 9. Summary and Conclusions, Appendices

Biography

Peter M. Sandman