基本説明
New in paperback. Hardcover was published in 2005. Concentrates on empirical studies in environmental sociology.
Full Description
As environmental issues increasingly impinge on society, sociologists have turned their attention to nature and the environment. However, unlike the majority of sociological work on environmental issues, which has too often been dominated by abstract theoretical disputes, this book concentrates on empirical studies in environmental sociology. It shows what sociologists can bring to current debates over environmental topics (including genetic modification) and - using the author's first-hand research - demonstrates how sociologists can best pursue practical work on environmental topics.
Contents
Introduction: Studying Environmental Issues Sociologically PART I: CULTURES OF MOVEMENT: THE SOCIOLOGY OF ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENTS AND PROBLEMS Social Movement Theory and the Character of Environmental Social Movements Shell, a Sure Target for Global Environmental Campaigning? [with John Forrester] How Environmental Problems Come to be 'Global': Sociological Perspectives on the Globalisation of the Environment PART II: STUDIES OF THE ENVIRONMENT, LAW AND PUBLIC POLICY Bog Standards: Contesting Conservation Value at a Public Inquiry Independence and Impartiality in Legal Defences of the Environment Modelling the Environment: Participation, Trust and Legitimacy in Urban Air-Quality Models PART III: CULTURES OF KNOWING AND PROVING: SCIENCE, EVIDENCE AND THE ENVIRONMENT Green Ambivalence about Science Mad about the Buoy: Trust and Method in the Brent Spar Controversy Genetically Modified Organisms and the Unbearable Irresolution of Testing The Value of Environmental Sociology: Towards a Sociology of the Sustainable Society Bibliographic References