Public Interest Communications: Foundation, Influence, and Importance
Editat de Brigitta R. Brunner, Kelly Cherninen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 mar 2026
PIC began on the heels of monumental movements toward societal change for the public good in the U.S., including the Civil Rights Movement, the Stonewall Riots, and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency. Contributors provide essential historic context alongside contemporary examples such as COVID-19 misinformation and book bans to emphasize how PIC, with its primary goal of fostering effective communication between public and private stakeholders, is not only relevant but necessary as our society continues to grapple with astronomical issues including climate change, economic and racial inequality, and the rise of authoritarianism.
Although PIC is rooted within strategic communication, contributors from disciplines as diverse as journalism, business, and even biology demonstrate the necessity of utilizing interdisciplinary approaches and methods toward establishing ongoing operative strategies that improve the human condition and, crucially, last beyond a single campaign.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666972054
ISBN-10: 1666972053
Pagini: 336
Ilustrații: 2 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666972053
Pagini: 336
Ilustrații: 2 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
About the Contributors
Introduction: Situating public interest communication foundation, application, and practice
Brigitta R. Brunner (Auburn University, USA) and Kelly Chernin (Appalachian State University, USA)
Intersections and Foundations
1. From public relations to public interest communication: A continuum tracing the location of the public interest in Communication practice
Brigitta R. Brunner and Amber M. K. Smallwood
2. Going beyond "mainstream" versus "activist" journalism: Re-conceptualizing journalism through a public interest communication lens
Summer Harlow (University of Texas at Austin, USA), Andrea Otáñez (University of Washington, USA), and Gina Baleria (Sonoma State University, USA)
3. "The government cannot create hurricanes:" Addressing contemporary public information communication challenges through rhetoric
Ashli Q. Stokes (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA)
4. Ethics in public interest communication: Theories, challenges, and case studies
Tor Bang (BI Norwegian Business School, Norway)
5. Can we do it differently? Political communication through the lens of the public interest
Barbara Myslik (Sacramento State University, USA)
6. Language and culture: Situating meaning in context for public interest communication
Joseph Radice (University of Florida, USA)
Application of Public Interest Communication Tenets
7. "Hey! Dr. Kat, epidemiologist:" Self-identified experts' efforts to correct COVD-19 misinformation and disinformation campaigns on social media
Carrie Reif-Stice (Augusta University, USA)
8. Privacy, politics, and public interest communication: The case of the removal of higher-education student data from Virginia's FOIA
Corey A. Hickerson (James Madison University, USA)
9. Social justice, business, and public interest communication
Candice L. Edrington (University of South Carolina, USA), Ajia Meux (University of Florida, Howard University, University of Oklahoma, USA), and Natalie T. J. Tindall (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
10. Crystallizing public malcontent: Examining the use of grassroots strategic communication to facilitate and challenge book bans in the United States
Christopher J. McCollough (Jacksonville State University, USA)
11. Danger or asset? On the importance of CEO sociopolitical advocacy to public interest communication
Anja Fessmann (Universität of Passau, Germany) and Jasper Fessmann (University of Memphis, USA)
12. The cost of marriage
Dean Mundy (University of Oregon, USA)
13. The role of PIC in today's increasingly turbulent globalized world
Marina Vujnovic (Monmouth University, USA) and Dean Kruckeberg (University of North Carolina Charlotte, USA)
Research, practice, and an emerging field
14. A brief history of public interest communication: PIC's early development and influence of its founding figures
Jasper Fessmann, Brigitta R. Brunner, and Anja Fessmann
15. Bridging academic silos for better science communication: The importance of collaborative research in public interest communication
Kelly Chernin and Mitchell Chernin (Bucknell University, USA)
16. The essential role of practitioners in public communications
Cody Hays (Arizona State University, USA)
17. The responsibilities of public interest communication practitioners
Cody Hays
Conclusion: Sustaining ourselves through sustainable work
Kelly Chernin, Cody Hays, and Brigitta R. Brunner
Index
Introduction: Situating public interest communication foundation, application, and practice
Brigitta R. Brunner (Auburn University, USA) and Kelly Chernin (Appalachian State University, USA)
Intersections and Foundations
1. From public relations to public interest communication: A continuum tracing the location of the public interest in Communication practice
Brigitta R. Brunner and Amber M. K. Smallwood
2. Going beyond "mainstream" versus "activist" journalism: Re-conceptualizing journalism through a public interest communication lens
Summer Harlow (University of Texas at Austin, USA), Andrea Otáñez (University of Washington, USA), and Gina Baleria (Sonoma State University, USA)
3. "The government cannot create hurricanes:" Addressing contemporary public information communication challenges through rhetoric
Ashli Q. Stokes (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA)
4. Ethics in public interest communication: Theories, challenges, and case studies
Tor Bang (BI Norwegian Business School, Norway)
5. Can we do it differently? Political communication through the lens of the public interest
Barbara Myslik (Sacramento State University, USA)
6. Language and culture: Situating meaning in context for public interest communication
Joseph Radice (University of Florida, USA)
Application of Public Interest Communication Tenets
7. "Hey! Dr. Kat, epidemiologist:" Self-identified experts' efforts to correct COVD-19 misinformation and disinformation campaigns on social media
Carrie Reif-Stice (Augusta University, USA)
8. Privacy, politics, and public interest communication: The case of the removal of higher-education student data from Virginia's FOIA
Corey A. Hickerson (James Madison University, USA)
9. Social justice, business, and public interest communication
Candice L. Edrington (University of South Carolina, USA), Ajia Meux (University of Florida, Howard University, University of Oklahoma, USA), and Natalie T. J. Tindall (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
10. Crystallizing public malcontent: Examining the use of grassroots strategic communication to facilitate and challenge book bans in the United States
Christopher J. McCollough (Jacksonville State University, USA)
11. Danger or asset? On the importance of CEO sociopolitical advocacy to public interest communication
Anja Fessmann (Universität of Passau, Germany) and Jasper Fessmann (University of Memphis, USA)
12. The cost of marriage
Dean Mundy (University of Oregon, USA)
13. The role of PIC in today's increasingly turbulent globalized world
Marina Vujnovic (Monmouth University, USA) and Dean Kruckeberg (University of North Carolina Charlotte, USA)
Research, practice, and an emerging field
14. A brief history of public interest communication: PIC's early development and influence of its founding figures
Jasper Fessmann, Brigitta R. Brunner, and Anja Fessmann
15. Bridging academic silos for better science communication: The importance of collaborative research in public interest communication
Kelly Chernin and Mitchell Chernin (Bucknell University, USA)
16. The essential role of practitioners in public communications
Cody Hays (Arizona State University, USA)
17. The responsibilities of public interest communication practitioners
Cody Hays
Conclusion: Sustaining ourselves through sustainable work
Kelly Chernin, Cody Hays, and Brigitta R. Brunner
Index
Recenzii
Public Interest Communication: Foundation, Influence, and Importance provides a long-awaited option for professors, students, scholars, and practitioners who are hoping to understand or explain public interest communications (PIC), its relation to other areas like journalism or public relations, and examples of PIC in action. The editors have gathered an outstanding list of authors, and are outstanding authors themselves, on this important topic.
There is no question that strategic communication and narrative storytelling shape the ways we understand our world-and more importantly, how we build a future that is inclusive, kind, and just. Teaching and inspiring public interest communicators is absolutely vital to that pursuit, and Brigitta R. Brunner & Kelly Chernin have given us a definitive, motivating text about what this work is all about, and why it matters.
There is no question that strategic communication and narrative storytelling shape the ways we understand our world-and more importantly, how we build a future that is inclusive, kind, and just. Teaching and inspiring public interest communicators is absolutely vital to that pursuit, and Brigitta R. Brunner & Kelly Chernin have given us a definitive, motivating text about what this work is all about, and why it matters.