ABSTRACT

In this accessible introduction to communication activism, organizer Karen Jeffreys and sociologist Charlotte Ryan draw on more than two decades of ongoing collaboration, using the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless (RICH) as a case study.

The book examines a community with shared values, decision-making, and conflict resolution procedures, tracking its organizing strategy and matched communication plan. The authors first describe a communication campaign during the welfare reform battles (1990–1995) in which they began to practice communication activism. In ongoing work with two organizations over the next two decades, they distil a model of communication activism that draws directly from vibrant traditions of empowerment communication in U.S. social movements and movements from the Global South.

Beyond Prime Time Activism provides students and researchers with an invaluable look at contemporary activism practices and with practical tools tried and tested in two decades of social movement engagement. This book is ideal for anyone participating in social change movements or studying how they navigate communication and media inequalities.

part I|60 pages

Models

chapter 2|17 pages

Public Communication Models

chapter 3|25 pages

Communication Activism for Social Change

part II|92 pages

Practices

chapter 6|29 pages

Framing Stories

part III|94 pages

Sustaining Communication Activism

chapter 7|22 pages

Continuous Inquiry

Learning From Experience

chapter 8|31 pages

Learning Through Research Collaboration

chapter 9|26 pages

Sustaining Communication Activism

Lessons and Unresolved Challenges

chapter |11 pages

Epilogue