Introduction and Authors 11 Strategic Communication: Field, Concepts, and the Cocreational Model 6Carl H. BotanPart I Strategic Communication Around the World 152 Dialogic Strategic Communication: A Key for Effective, Sustainable, and Ethical Social Conflict Management in Guatemala 17Karina J. Garcia-Ruano3 Strategic Rhetoric, Dialogue, and the Long Now: A Case Study of Long-Term Thinking 31Michael L. Kent and Petra Theunissen4 Strategic Communication in Turkish Public Sector: Through the Lens of Public Relations 45B. P1nar Özdemir and Melike AktasOther chapters addressing strategic communication around the world: Chapters 6 & 8 (Part II), Chapter 12 (Part III), Chapter 18 (Part V), Chapter 21 (Part VI)Part II Cocreational Perspective in Strategic Communication 595 A Cocreational Approach to Social-Mediated Crisis Communication: Communicating Health Crises Strategically on Social Media 61Yan Jin and Lucinda Austin6 The Cocreational View of Character Assassination 76Sergei A. Samoilenko7 Cocreational Perspectives on Strategic Communication in Counterterrorism 91Damion Waymer8 Communicating Safety in Norwegian Road Tunnels: A Cocreational Perspective of Strategic Communication 102Sverre Kjetil Rød and Daniel NilssonOther chapters addressing the cocreational perspective: Chapter 1, Chapter 2 (Part I), Chapter 9 (Part III), Chapter 17 (Part V), Chapter 21 (Part VI)Part III Strategic Communication in Business, Government, and Military 1119 Strategic Communication in the Military: An Air Force Perspective 113Ronaldo Martinez Jr., Katrina J. Cheesman, Nicholas J. Mercurio, and Cara A. Bousie10 Strategic Communication in the Defense Industry: Grand Strategy, Key Publics, and Tactics 129Michael F. Doble and David P. MacNeil11 President Obama, the Affordable Care Act, and the Challenges of Strategic Political Communication 147Stephen J. Farnsworth12 Strategic Communication for Civil Society and Nation Building: Communication for Societal Effectiveness 165Maureen Taylor and Erich J. SommerfeldtOther chapters addressing business, government, or military: Chapter 4 (Part I), Chapters 6, 7, & 8 (Part II), Chapter 17 (Part V), Chapter 22 (Part VI)Part IV Crisis and Emergency Strategic Communication 17913 Crisis Communication through the Lens of Strategic Communication 181W. Timothy Coombs14 Emergency Preparation and Response for Human-Generated Disasters 194Emily Helsel, Timothy L. Sellnow, and Deanna D. Sellnow15 Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Strategic Communication for Natural Disasters 208Matthew W. Seeger, Khairul Islam, and Henry S. SeegerOther chapters addressing crisis and emergency communication: Chapter 2 (Part I), Chapters 5 & 8 (Part II)Part V Social, Climate, and Environmental Strategic Communication 22316 Overcome the Deficit Model by Applying the CAUSE Model to Climate Change Communication 225Katherine E. Rowan, Allison Engblom, Julia Hathaway, Rebecca Lloyd, Ian Vorster, Erin Z. Anderson, and Karen L. Akerlof17 Organizations and Participation of Environmental Publics: A Cocreational Perspective Case Study 262Janey G. Trowbridge18 Strategic Communication in Religious and Belief Communities: Lessons from Holocaust Re-education 273Denise Edwards-Neff19 Gender in US Strategic Communication Research and Practice: Confronting the Master Narratives 292Linda Aldoory, Elizabeth L. Toth, and Liang MaOther chapters addressing social and environmental issues: Chapter 2 (Part I), Chapter 7 (Part II), Chapter 22 (Part VI)Part VI Strategic Communication and Health 30720 Strategic Communication Campaigns in Health 309Satveer Kaur-Gill and Mohan J. Dutta21 Cocreating in the Wonderland: Communication and Patient-Oriented Healthcare in Russia 320Alexandra Endaltseva, Nelli Bachurina, and Maria Mordvinova22 Bridging Tobacco Control Advocacy and Strategic Communication Scholarship: Tackling the Tobacco Industry's Extrinsic Corporate Social Responsibility with Strategic Networking 336Jungmi Jun, Chang-Won Choi, and Joonkyoung Kim23 Research and Evaluation in Strategic Communication 360Yi Grace Ji, Zifei Fay Chen, Zongchao Cathy Li, and Don W. StacksOther chapters addressing strategic communication and health: Chapter 5 (Part II), Chapters 11 & 12 (Part III), Chapter 14 (Part IV)Index 374
Carl H. Botan is Professor of Communication at George Mason University, Virginia, USA. He is the author of Strategic Communication Theory and Practice: The Cocreational View, the first known theoretic book on strategic communication and its applications. Dr Botan has won numerous awards, including the Public Relations Institute of Australia's Outstanding Practitioner-Scholar Award and the Outstanding Research Achievement Award in Public Relations Scholarship. He has served on the National Curriculum Commissions for Public Relations in both the United States and in Australia, has taught strategic communication/social marketing for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Department of Health's Office of Women's Health.