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Invitation to Environmental Sociology 6th Revised edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 504 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x177 mm, kaal: 830 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1506366015
  • ISBN-13: 9781506366012
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 504 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x177 mm, kaal: 830 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1506366015
  • ISBN-13: 9781506366012
Teised raamatud teemal:
If there were ever a time for environmental sociology, it is now. As COVID-19 is spreading across our communities, our countries, our world, we have all become too familiar with maintaining that awful term of "social distance." Yet there can be no true distance from that which is always with us and within us: our social ecology

An Invitation to Environmental Sociology invites students to delve into this rapidly changing field. Written in a lively, engaging style, the authors cover a broad range of topics in environmental sociology with a personal passion rarely seen in sociology texts. The books unique organization explores three different kinds of questions about interactions between humans and the natural world: the material, the ideal, and the practical. The Sixth Edition of this bestseller comprises 12 chapters instead of 13, making it easier to fit into the normal rhythm of a course. But the result is also an edition that is up-to-date and enriched with much newer material, while continuing to use an inviting tone that the title promises.



Included with this title:

The password-protected Instructor Resource Site (formally known as SAGE Edge) offers access to all text-specific resources, including a test bank and editable, chapter-specific PowerPoint® slides.
Preface xii
About the Authors xiv
Chapter 1 Environmental Problems and Society
3(48)
Joining the Dialogue
5(5)
The Ecology of Dialogue
6(4)
The Dialogue of Environmental Justice
10(1)
Environmental Justice Across Time
10(19)
Global Climate Change
11(6)
Energy
17(1)
Fossil Fuels
17(3)
Non-Fossil Energy Sources
20(1)
Using Less
21(1)
Threats to Land and Water
22(4)
The Ozone "Hole"
26(1)
The Two Kinds of Smog
27(2)
Environmental Justice Across Social Space
29(12)
Who Gets the Bads?
30(3)
Who Gets the Goods?
33(1)
Income Inequality
33(2)
Wealth Inequality
35(1)
Consumption Inequality
36(2)
Health Inequality
38(2)
Environmental Justice for Everyone
40(1)
Environmental Justice Across Species
41(7)
Decline and Loss of Species
42(4)
Loss of Landscapes
46(1)
Loss of Intimacy
47(1)
The Social Constitution of Environmental Problems and Solutions
48(3)
PART I THE MATERIAL
51(166)
Chapter 2 Health and Justice
53(32)
The Material Basis of the Human Condition
57(2)
Ecological Dialogue
57(2)
One Health
59(14)
Invironments of Food: Feeders and Eaters
60(5)
The Spirit of Water
65(3)
Pesticides and the Health of All
68(5)
One Justice
73(6)
Utilitarianism
73(3)
John Rawls and Justice as Fairness
76(2)
The Original Position of Mutual Aid
78(1)
Living Downstream: The Precautionary Principle
79(3)
Mercury and the People of Grassy Narrows
80(2)
Making Ties
82(3)
Chapter 3 Consumption and Materialism
85(30)
The Hierarchy of Needs
86(4)
The Original Affluent Society
88(2)
Consumption, Modern Style
90(6)
The Leisure Class
91(3)
Positional Goods
94(2)
Goods and Sentiments
96(8)
The Reality of Sentiments
97(2)
Hau: The Spirit of Goods
99(1)
Sentiments and Advertising
100(2)
Environmental Advertising
102(2)
Consumption as Environmental Action
104(1)
Goods and Community
104(5)
The Time Crunch
105(3)
Consumption and the Building of Community
108(1)
The Treadmill of Consumption
109(6)
Chapter 4 Money and Markets
115(34)
The Growth Compulsion
118(6)
The Wage-Price Gap
118(3)
Money and the Stampede for More
121(1)
The Treadmill of Production
122(2)
The "Invisible Elbow"
124(7)
Development and the Politics of the Growth Machine
125(1)
Core and Periphery, Urban and Rural
126(2)
Invisible Communities
128(3)
Overproduction and Underproduction
131(2)
Metabolic Rift
132(1)
The Constructed Market
133(11)
Constructing Freedom
133(2)
The Corporation and Regulation
135(2)
Classic Liberalism and Neoliberalism
137(2)
The Treadmills Within
139(1)
The Dialogue of Treadmills
140(3)
The Social Creation of Economics
143(1)
Rock Steady Farm and the Economics of Optimism
144(5)
Chapter 5 Technology and Science
149(32)
The Monologues of Technology and Science
150(1)
Technology as a Dialogue
150(8)
Technology as a Social Structure: The Problem of Cars
152(3)
The Social Organization of Convenience
155(2)
The Constraints of Convenience
157(1)
Technological Somnambulism
158(5)
Phenomenology
158(2)
Culture
160(2)
Politics
162(1)
Science as Dialogue
163(8)
The Black Box
166(4)
Actor Network Theory
170(1)
Disasters, Fast and Slow
171(7)
A New Species of Trouble
174(1)
Normal Accidents
175(3)
Science and Technology as Political
178(3)
Chapter 6 Population and Development
181(36)
The Malthusian Argument
182(3)
Population as Culture
185(2)
The Inequality Critique of Malthusianism
187(15)
The Development of Underdevelopment
190(3)
Understanding Underdevelopment
193(2)
The Structural Adjustment Trap
195(3)
Food for All
198(1)
The Politics of Famine
199(1)
Limits of the Inequality Perspective
200(2)
The Technologic Critique of Malthusianism
202(5)
A Cornucopian World?
202(3)
The Boserup Effect
205(2)
The Demographic Critique of Malthusianism
207(8)
A New Demographic Transition?
209(1)
Women and Development
210(3)
Family Planning and Birth Control
213(2)
The Environment as a Social Actor
215(2)
PART II THE IDEAL
217(102)
Chapter 7 The Ideology of Environmental Domination
219(34)
Christianity and Environmental Domination
221(8)
The Moral Parallels of Protestantism and Capitalism
221(3)
The Moral Parallels of Christianity, Science, and Technology
224(2)
The Greener Side of Christianity
226(2)
Non-Western Philosophies and the Environment
228(1)
Individualism and Environmental Domination
229(6)
Individualism, the Body, and Ecology
229(2)
The Carnivalesque Body
231(2)
The Classical Body
233(1)
Balancing the Ecological Self and the Ecological Community
234(1)
Heteropatriarchy and Environmental Domination
235(16)
The Ecology of Sexism
236(3)
Ecofeminism
239(1)
The Controversy Over Ecofeminism
240(2)
The Ecology of Heterosexism
242(2)
Queer Ecology
244(2)
Queering the Farm
246(5)
The Difference That Ideology Makes
251(2)
Chapter 8 The Ideology of Environmental Concern
253(34)
Ancient Beginnings
255(9)
Greece
255(3)
China and India
258(2)
Rome
260(2)
The Natural Conscience
262(2)
The Moral Basis of Contemporary Environmental Concern
264(4)
The Natural Other and the Natural Me
266(2)
The Extent of Contemporary Environmental Concern
268(9)
The Fluctuation of Environmental Concern
268(5)
Social Status and Environmental Concern
273(1)
The (Conservative) White-Male Effect
274(2)
The Environmentalism of the Poor
276(1)
Two Theories of Contemporary Environmental Concern
277(7)
Paradigm Shift
277(2)
Questioning Paradigm Shift
279(1)
Ecological Modernization
280(2)
Questioning Ecological Modernization
282(2)
The Dialogue of Environmental Concern
284(1)
Postscript
284(3)
Chapter 9 The Human Nature of Nature
287(32)
The Contradictions of Nature
288(4)
Ancient Problems, Ancient Solutions
289(2)
The Contradictions of Contemporary Environmentalism
291(1)
Nature as a Social Construction
292(7)
Naturalizing Capitalism
293(2)
Nature and Scientific Racism: Morton's Craniometry
295(2)
Nature and Scientific Racism: Huntington's Environmental Determinism
297(2)
Environment as a Social Construction
299(15)
Constructing the Ozone Hole
301(2)
Constructing Wilderness
303(5)
Tourism and the Social Construction of Landscape
308(3)
The Social Construction of Environmental Exclusion
311(2)
The Social Construction of Environmental Nonproblems
313(1)
The Dialogue of Nature and Ideology
314(5)
The Social Inconvenience of "Nature"
314(2)
Resonance
316(3)
PART III THE PRACTICAL
319(84)
Chapter 10 Mobilizing the Just Ecological Society
321(32)
Mobilizing Ecological Conceptions
323(12)
The Cultivation of Knowledge
324(3)
Cultivating Knowledge in the Fields of Iowa
327(4)
Cultivating Dialogic Consciousness
331(4)
Mobilizing Ecological Connections
335(8)
The Tragedy of the Commons
335(1)
Why It Really Isn't as Bad as All That
336(1)
Togetherness and the Dialogue of Solidarities
337(3)
A Tale of Two Villages
340(2)
How Big Is Your Solidarity?
342(1)
Mobilizing Ecological Contestations
343(7)
Double Politics and the Political Opportunity Structure
343(3)
The Double Politics of Practical Farmers of Iowa
346(4)
The Pros of the Three Cons
350(3)
Chapter 11 Transitioning to the Just Ecological Society
353(26)
Democracy and Bureaucracy
355(3)
Legal Structure
358(4)
The Bottom and the Top
362(2)
Participatory Governance
364(3)
Supplying Water in a Costa Rican Village
365(2)
Local Knowledge
367(3)
Growing Local Knowledge in Honduras
367(2)
Clearing the Air in Three British Cities
369(1)
Governing Participation
370(2)
Grounding Our Knowledge
372(2)
Soul Fire Farm and Just Ecological Transition
374(1)
Finding Our Balance
375(4)
Chapter 12 Living in the Just Ecological Society
379(24)
The A-B Split
381(2)
The Reconstitution of Daily Life
383(17)
Greening Cities
384(4)
Greening Capitalism
388(6)
Green Alternatives to Economic Growth
394(2)
The Local and the Global
396(1)
Opting Out to Opt In
397(3)
Reconstituting Ourselves
400(3)
References 403(43)
Notes 446(29)
Index 475
Michael Mayerfeld Bell is Professor of Community and Environmental Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For his day job, he is principally an environmental sociologist and a social theorist, focusing on dialogics, the sociology of nature, and social justice. These concerns for the world have led him to studies of agroecology, the body, community, consumption, culture, development, food, democracy, economic sociology, gender, inequality, participation, place, politics, rurality, the sociology of music, and more. He is also a part-time composer of grassroots and classical music, and a mandolinist, guitarist, and singer. Loka Ashwood is an assistant professor at the University of Kentucky in the Department of Sociology. She theorizes about democracy, the environment, and social action to pinpoint points of aggravation and openings for change. She analyzes specific corporate and regulatory structures that undergird dispossession of property and community in rural places. She works with people to explore creative pathways forward amid intense distrust and government neglect. Learn more at www.lokaashwood.com.



Isaac Sohn Leslie is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of WisconsinMadison. Ikes primary research area is the sociology of global environmental and economic change, with a focus on developing food systems for a just climate transition. Their research in the U.S. and Argentina centers queer, feminist, and anti-racist perspectives on designing food chains that prioritize healthy ecological and social relations. Ike recently co-edited a Special Issue of Society & Natural Resources on gender, sexuality, and sustainability in U.S. farming. They are also a beginning farmer and active in queer farmer organizing. For more, visit www.isaacleslie.com.

 







Laura Hanson Schlachter is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of WisconsinMadison. Her scholarship and teaching focus on environmental sociology, social movements, and economic sociology. As a mixed methods researcher, Laura has directed the first national survey about workplace democracy, interviewed activists seeding a regenerative economy in Appalachia, and collaborated with village leaders to improve walkability in rural Wisconsin. Laura has a background in inclusive economic development and an ongoing volunteer role at the Madison affiliate of 350.org. Her writing has appeared in peer-reviewed academic journals, policy reports, and neighborhood newsletters. Her current research about constructive strategies to rise to the challenge of the climate crisis and alternative ways of organizing work has been generously supported by the National Science Foundation and Corporation for National and Community Service. Learn more at www.lauraschlachter.com.