Description

Book Synopsis

In 2015 the United Nations set out an ambitious plan under UN Resolution 70/1 to prioritize seventeen separate goals over a fifteen-year period to promote health, life, equality, and the environment. The Sustainable Development Goals include ending poverty and hunger; Reducing Inequality; promoting good health and well-being; quality education; gender equality; clean water and sanitation; affordable and clean energy; decent work and economic growth; industry, innovation, and infrastructure; sustainable cities and communities; responsible consumption and production; climate action; life under water; life on land; peace, justice, and strong institutions; and developing partnerships to achieve these goals.

This book examines the way in which SDG initiatives have been disseminated by mainstream media, in government discourse and by NGO’s, charitable organisations, and campaign groups. It questions to what extent sustainability narratives are being supported and how they represented; how saving the environment can be made pertinent to someone who has no access to clean food or running water; and why local initiatives (in which indigenous populations are making a real difference) are overshadowed by multinationals whose attempts to rectify the damage their goods have done gains more credible reportage.



Table of Contents

Introduction, Ben Harbisher

Part I: Social Theory and Politics

Chapter 1: The Social Construct of Sustainability in Media Development, Michel Leroy

Chapter 2: United Nations SDG on Gender Equality, Mariana Abreu and Bárbara Lima

Chapter 3: ‘Collateral Benefits’ and the ‘International Community’: discursive realignment after the fall of Kabul, Stuart Price

Part II: Mediation and Framing

Chapter 4: The Forgotten SDGs, Delayney Harness, Julius Klingelhoefer, and Shiv Ganesh

Chapter 5: Greenwashing Bali: How Multinationals Appropriated the UN SDG Environment Agenda, Ben Harbisher

Chapter 6: What Difference Does It Make? The importance of Documentary Film to Sustainable Development Goals in a post-truth world, Rhys Davies

Chapter Seven - Richard Irwin – Fragments of Nature

Chapter 8: Nigerian Data Policies - New Developments in State Surveillance; Jenifer Ere

Part III: Sustainability and Education

Chapter 9: Transversal Feminism, SDGs, and Digital Media Literacy in Mexico: an Oaxacan Study, Jason Lee

Chapter 10: Promoting Sustainable Development Goals to University Students in Cambodia, Steven Graham

Chapter 11: A Communication Strategy for Climate Change Solutions, Candy Marisol Hernandez and Heidy Isabel

The Mediation of Sustainability: Development

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    A Hardback by Ben Harbisher

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 17/03/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538161111, 978-1538161111
      ISBN10: 1538161117

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In 2015 the United Nations set out an ambitious plan under UN Resolution 70/1 to prioritize seventeen separate goals over a fifteen-year period to promote health, life, equality, and the environment. The Sustainable Development Goals include ending poverty and hunger; Reducing Inequality; promoting good health and well-being; quality education; gender equality; clean water and sanitation; affordable and clean energy; decent work and economic growth; industry, innovation, and infrastructure; sustainable cities and communities; responsible consumption and production; climate action; life under water; life on land; peace, justice, and strong institutions; and developing partnerships to achieve these goals.

      This book examines the way in which SDG initiatives have been disseminated by mainstream media, in government discourse and by NGO’s, charitable organisations, and campaign groups. It questions to what extent sustainability narratives are being supported and how they represented; how saving the environment can be made pertinent to someone who has no access to clean food or running water; and why local initiatives (in which indigenous populations are making a real difference) are overshadowed by multinationals whose attempts to rectify the damage their goods have done gains more credible reportage.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction, Ben Harbisher

      Part I: Social Theory and Politics

      Chapter 1: The Social Construct of Sustainability in Media Development, Michel Leroy

      Chapter 2: United Nations SDG on Gender Equality, Mariana Abreu and Bárbara Lima

      Chapter 3: ‘Collateral Benefits’ and the ‘International Community’: discursive realignment after the fall of Kabul, Stuart Price

      Part II: Mediation and Framing

      Chapter 4: The Forgotten SDGs, Delayney Harness, Julius Klingelhoefer, and Shiv Ganesh

      Chapter 5: Greenwashing Bali: How Multinationals Appropriated the UN SDG Environment Agenda, Ben Harbisher

      Chapter 6: What Difference Does It Make? The importance of Documentary Film to Sustainable Development Goals in a post-truth world, Rhys Davies

      Chapter Seven - Richard Irwin – Fragments of Nature

      Chapter 8: Nigerian Data Policies - New Developments in State Surveillance; Jenifer Ere

      Part III: Sustainability and Education

      Chapter 9: Transversal Feminism, SDGs, and Digital Media Literacy in Mexico: an Oaxacan Study, Jason Lee

      Chapter 10: Promoting Sustainable Development Goals to University Students in Cambodia, Steven Graham

      Chapter 11: A Communication Strategy for Climate Change Solutions, Candy Marisol Hernandez and Heidy Isabel

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