Since it relates to common and frequently troublesome aspects of human behaviour, the concept of addiction is of considerable interest to the media, as it is to the health sciences and medicine. With some exceptions, the problems that emerge from the media's use of the concept are similar to those e
Credibility and the use of geospatial media in activism and advocacy
โ Scribed by Lane DeNicola
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 73 KB
- Volume
- 45
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0044-7870
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Earth remote sensing (ERS)โthe science and craft of interpreting images of the terrestrial surface collected at high altitude by aircraft or satelliteโis unquestionably a premier source of current knowledge about our environment, and offers vast possibilities for improving environmental stewardship, whether by state agencies, corporations, or civil society. However, it has also been critiqued as a tool that can too easily shape knowledge according to dominant interests, bringing into question recent experimentation with ERS by advocacy groups and activists. This essay considers the claim that ERS is in danger of suffering from an โimagery credibility paradox,โ allegedly a result of the recent influx of inexperienced โimagery activistsโ whose unorthodox priorities threaten to destabilize public confidence in ERS imagery as a source of knowledge. I explore the rhetorical dichotomization of the ERS community into โtraditionalโ and โnewโ users, reframing the imagery credibility paradox as an attempt 1) to democratize a previously exclusive technology, and 2) to renegotiate the terms of credibility and expert authority. In this effort I support an argument for โimagery activistsโ as vital contributors to a more appropriate use of โgeospatial mediaโ and to a needed discussion on the ethical use of such media.
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A telephone survey was executed prior to the March 1992 primary election in suburban Washington, DC, to examine media use, political self, and system efficacy across race and social class. Results show media use predicts political self efficacy, or respondent reported ability to cope with the politi