The Radical Potential of Public Hearings: A Rhetorical Assessment of Resistance and Indecorous Voice in Public Participation Processes

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2016-01-01
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Hunt, Kathleen
Paliewiscz, Nicholas
Endres, Danielle
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Hunt, Kathleen
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Agricultural Education and Studies
Abstract

Little scholarship in environmental communication has considered the intersections between public participation and social movement. We fill this gap by discussing how public participation process can become sites of radical politics when publics employ disruptive or improper tactics, known as indecorous voice. Indecorum can be used to sustain protest matters beyond official forums, engage multiple audiences, and forge new identities among publics. We demonstrate the utility of indecorum through two case studies: Love Canal, NY where residents combat exposure to toxic chemicals, and Salt Lake City, UT, where publics challenge industrial expansion in a fight for clean air.

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This is a chapter from Confronting the Challenges of Public Participation: Issues in Environmental, Planning and Health Decision-Making (2016): 65-79. Posted with permission.

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Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2016
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