Responding to Crisis

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attribution theory
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Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Accidents
communication
Communication Crisis Planning
crises
Crisis Cluster
Crisis Communication
Crisis Communication Literature
Crisis Management
Crisis Management Model
Crisis Management Plan
Crisis Public Relations
Crisis Response
Crisis Response Strategies
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Ford Motor Company
Image Repair
Image Repair Efforts
Improvisational Performers
Including Communication Managers
legitimacy restoration
Local Tv News Station
Louisville Courier Journal
management
metaphor analysis
narrative analysis
NBC DateLine
organizational
organizational discourse
plan
Postcrisis Response
practitioners
Product Recall Crisis
public
Public Relations Practitioner
Public Relations Staff
Public Relations Staff Members
Purposive Survey
relations
response
rhetorical crisis management strategies
sensemaking processes
situation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805840599
  • Weight: 890g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2003
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In recent years, researchers and practitioners have explored the nature, theory, and best practices that are required for effective and ethical crisis preparation and response. The consequences of being unprepared to respond quickly, appropriately, and ethically to a crisis are dramatic and well documented. For this reason, crisis consulting and the development of crisis response plans and protocols have become more than a cottage industry.


Taking a rhetorical view of crisis events and utterances, this book is devoted to adding new insights to the discussion, and to describing a rhetorical approach to crisis communication. To help set the tone for that description, the opening chapter reviews a rhetorical perspective on organizational crisis. As such it raises questions and provokes issues more than it addresses and answers them definitively. The other chapters can be viewed as a series of experts participating in a panel discussion. The challenge to each of the authors is to add depth and breadth of understanding to the analysis of the rhetorical implications of a crisis, as well as to the strategies that can be used ethically and responsibly. Central to this analysis is the theoretic perspective that crisis response requires rhetorically tailored statements that satisfactorily address the narratives surrounding the crisis which are used by interested parties to define and judge it.


This volume will be of value to scholars and students interested in crisis communication, and is certain to influence future work and research on responding to crises.

Dan Pyle Millar, Robert L. Heath