ORCID Profile
0000-0001-7277-7386
Current Organisation
Flinders University
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Publisher: IEEE
Date: 07-2018
Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Date: 12-2021
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 26-02-2014
Abstract: Using a narrative–semiotic approach, this article explores the decisions, plans, and actions involved in dealing with organizational risks and crises. It describes a model, or methodological framework, for crisis analysis as well as for organizational learning aimed at crisis management and prevention. The model is based on the interrelational positioning of the relevant agents (project managers, project team members, and stakeholders), the discourses produced by these agents, and their actions. This model is valuable for understanding the situations, goals, motivations, and anxieties that underlie the risk assessment and actions taken during crises. To illustrate the theoretical discussion, the article analyzes the Columbia Space Shuttle accident of 2003.
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 02-01-2022
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 09-01-2004
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Date: 2006
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 21-10-2020
Abstract: This article introduces the special issue on crisis communication, whose aim is to bring together erse approaches and methods of analysis in the field. The article overviews the field by discussing two main frameworks, dealing with postcrisis (reputation management) and precrisis (issue management) communication, respectively. The article then overviews some major theories of crisis communication and their different methodologies: image repair, situational crisis communication theory, rhetorical arena theory, narrative, and integrated crisis mapping. It ends with a description of some lessons learned that apply to all approaches and an overview of the contributions to the issue. By comparing and contrasting different perspectives on crisis communication, the article emphasizes the rich ersity that characterizes this branch of business communication.
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 17-07-2023
DOI: 10.1177/00472816231187356
Abstract: This paper introduces the concerns of the papers in the Special Issue and examines communication as a chameleon discipline that responds and adapts to sometimes very challenging contexts. It explores the strengths and weaknesses of the ersity of approaches that exist in communication studies and shows how this ersity offers both opportunities to be resourceful and hurdles to be managed. The paper reflects on the definitional ambiguity of communication and the ways that communication is perceived and approached in different institutions globally. Its aim is to forge a way through debates about the nature of the field by paying attention to the responsiveness and adaptability of those who teach communication in the face of educational and political change.
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 26-01-2004
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 2006
DOI: 10.1515/SEM.2006.049
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 20-01-2012
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 2009
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 12-03-2017
Publisher: Auckland University of Technology (AUT) Library
Date: 31-12-2014
Abstract: Issues of ‘failed’ nation-states, political meltdowns, coups and increasing militarisation have dogged the recent postcolonial history and environment of the Pacific. This, aside from the political and economic effects generally ascribed as the main societal impacts from such crises, has important social and cultural effects that are largely undocumented by academia as well as the media. The effects of political crisis on creativity through censorship, for ex le, are not adequately covered in current research and scholarship. The ‘Oceans and Nations: “Failed” States and the Environment in the Pacific’ symposium was organised concurrently with the Pacific Science Inter-Congress at the University of the South Pacific on 8-12 July 2013. This commentary and several other papers presented at this symposium are being published as part of this themed edition of Pacific Journalism Review. This article reflects on the role of the media in Fijians’ awareness, of environmental issues. It considers the question of whether local cultural and linguistic factors make the media a suitable source of information on the environment for Fijians, and proposes a method for future research that would help to answer this question.
Publisher: Philosophy Documentation Center
Date: 2004
No related grants have been discovered for Sky Marsen.