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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Roger W. Cobb , David M. PrimoPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Brookings Institution Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.313kg ISBN: 9780815771999ISBN 10: 0815771991 Pages: 220 Publication Date: 23 May 2003 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsAirline travel is the safest mode of travel in a statistical sense, and yet airline crashes can generate hundreds of newspaper stories and intense political pressure to improve safety in the skies. Is each unfortunate accident the catalyst for improvement in public safety? Cobb and Primo show that the answer, unfortunately, is no. This book deserves wide attention from those involved in transportation policy and from those interested in agenda-setting, problem definition, and the policy process. We have a lot to learn. -Frank R. Baumgartner, Professor and head of the department of political science, Pennsylvania State University, 3/15/2003 | Cobb and Primo's book is the first to describe how spectacular airline crashes, accompanied by heavy media attention, can distort decisionmaking relating to safety and security. Cobb and Primo do so without writing a polemic of the sort that characterizes most recent work in this field. This is a must-read book for students and policymakers in this area, and in any other area where risk, media attention, and government policy affect policy outcomes. -Thomas A. Birkland, University at Albany, SUNY, 3/15/2003 | This book is fascinating and relentlessly intelligent. Perhaps its most intriguing message is that, while much is wrong with the aviation safety system, the system works astoundingly well. USAir 427, ValuJet 592, and TWA 800 were horrible tragedies, but dozens of millions of flights later, no similar disasters have followed. And the same might well prove true of September 11. -Arnold Barnett, George Eastman Professor of Management Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 3/15/2003 | Readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development.... This book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management. -William R. Caldwell, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 | ... a quick and readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development, I recommend Roger Cobb and David Primo's The Plane Truth: Airline Crashes, the Media, and Transportation Policy.... The book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management. -William R. Caldwell, Central Missouri State University, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 | Cobb and Primo... examine how airline crashes made highly visible by media coverage can distort air transport policymaking.... Carefully researched and written.... Three fine chapters detail mini case-studies of media coverage and policy reactions to three major 1990's crashes.... The book will interest communication scholars who study risk or agenda setting, providing ideas for theoretically driven projects. And journalists covering air transportation will find here an alert to numerous missed stories-if they can be patient readers of clear but ultra-careful writing. -Carol Reese Dykers, Salem College, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 4/1/2004 | Air travel is very safe, yet major policy changes are driven by media frenzies over the occasional crash. Rather than solely critique the regulation of air safety, Cobb and Primo focus on the consequences of agenda-setting for policymaking. The resulting general lesson -that the fundamental structure of policymaking is deeply affected by dramatic, visible, frightening events -has so far escaped policy analysts. THE PLANE TRUTH is must reading for both students and practitioners. -Bryan D. Jones, University of Washington-Seattle, 3/15/2003 Airline travel is the safest mode of travel in a statistical sense, and yet airline crashes can generate hundreds of newspaper stories and intense political pressure to improve safety in the skies. Is each unfortunate accident the catalyst for improvement in public safety? Cobb and Primo show that the answer, unfortunately, is no. This book deserves wide attention from those involved in transportation policy and from those interested in agenda-setting, problem definition, and the policy process. We have a lot to learn. --Frank R. Baumgartner, Professor and head of the department of political science, Pennsylvania State University, 3/15/2003 Cobb and Primo's book is the first to describe how spectacular airline crashes, accompanied by heavy media attention, can distort decisionmaking relating to safety and security. Cobb and Primo do so without writing a polemic of the sort that characterizes most recent work in this field. This is a must-read book for students and policymakers in this area, and in any other area where risk, media attention, and government policy affect policy outcomes. --Thomas A. Birkland, University at Albany, SUNY, 3/15/2003 This book is fascinating and relentlessly intelligent. Perhaps its most intriguing message is that, while much is wrong with the aviation safety system, the system works astoundingly well. USAir 427, ValuJet 592, and TWA 800 were horrible tragedies, but dozens of millions of flights later, no similar disasters have followed. And the same might well prove true of September 11. --Arnold Barnett, George Eastman Professor of Management Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 3/15/2003 Readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development... This book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management. --William R. Caldwell, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 ... a quick and readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development, I recommend Roger Cobb and David Primo's The Plane Truth: Airline Crashes, the Media, and Transportation Policy... The book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management. --William R. Caldwell, Central Missouri State University, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 Cobb and Primo... examine how airline crashes made highly visible by media coverage can distort air transport policymaking... Carefully researched and written... Three fine chapters detail mini case-studies of media coverage and policy reactions to three major 1990's crashes... The book will interest communication scholars who study risk or agenda setting, providing ideas for theoretically driven projects. And journalists covering air transportation will find here an alert to numerous missed stories-if they can be patient readers of clear but ultra-careful writing. --Carol Reese Dykers, Salem College, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 4/1/2004 """Airline travel is the safest mode of travel in a statistical sense, and yet airline crashes can generate hundreds of newspaper stories and intense political pressure to improve safety in the skies. Is each unfortunate accident the catalyst for improvement in public safety? Cobb and Primo show that the answer, unfortunately, is no. This book deserves wide attention from those involved in transportation policy and from those interested in agenda-setting, problem definition, and the policy process. We have a lot to learn."" —Frank R. Baumgartner, Professor and head of the department of political science, Pennsylvania State University, 3/15/2003 |""Cobb and Primo's book is the first to describe how spectacular airline crashes, accompanied by heavy media attention, can distort decisionmaking relating to safety and security. Cobb and Primo do so without writing a polemic of the sort that characterizes most recent work in this field. This is a must-read book for students and policymakers in this area, and in any other area where risk, media attention, and government policy affect policy outcomes."" —Thomas A. Birkland, University at Albany, SUNY, 3/15/2003 |""This book is fascinating and relentlessly intelligent. Perhaps its most intriguing message is that, while much is wrong with the aviation safety system, the system works astoundingly well. USAir 427, ValuJet 592, and TWA 800 were horrible tragedies, but dozens of millions of flights later, no similar disasters have followed. And the same might well prove true of September 11."" —Arnold Barnett, George Eastman Professor of Management Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 3/15/2003 |""Readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development.... This book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management."" —William R. Caldwell, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 |""... a quick and readable look at major aircraft accidents and post-accident policy development, I recommend Roger Cobb and David Primo's The Plane Truth: Airline Crashes, the Media, and Transportation Policy.... The book is a must read for scholars and students of aviation policy and safety management."" —William R. Caldwell, Central Missouri State University, Perspectives on Political Science, 3/1/2004 |""Cobb and Primo... examine how airline crashes made highly visible by media coverage can distort air transport policymaking.... Carefully researched and written.... Three fine chapters detail mini case-studies of media coverage and policy reactions to three major 1990's crashes.... The book will interest communication scholars who study risk or agenda setting, providing ideas for theoretically driven projects. And journalists covering air transportation will find here an alert to numerous missed stories-if they can be patient readers of clear but ultra-careful writing."" —Carol Reese Dykers, Salem College, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 4/1/2004 |""Air travel is very safe, yet major policy changes are driven by media frenzies over the occasional crash. Rather than solely critique the regulation of air safety, Cobb and Primo focus on the consequences of agenda-setting for policymaking. The resulting general lesson —that the fundamental structure of policymaking is deeply affected by dramatic, visible, frightening events —has so far escaped policy analysts. THE PLANE TRUTH is must reading for both students and practitioners."" —Bryan D. Jones, University of Washington–Seattle, 3/15/2003" Author InformationRoger W. Cobb is professor of political science at Brown University. David M. Primo is assistant professor of political science at the University of Rochester. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |