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The International Handbook Of Environmental Sociology, Second Edition
Michael R. Redclift
, Graham Woodgate
Edited by Michael R. Redclift, Professor of International Environmental Policy, King’s College, University of London, UK and Graham Woodgate, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Sociology, Institute for the Study of the Americas, School of Advanced Study, University of London, UK
| 2010 448 pp Hardback 978 1 84844 088 3 |
| 2011 Paperback 978 1 84980 088 4 |
| ebook isbn 978 1 84980 552 0 |
Hardback £140.00 on-line price £126.00
Paperback £35.00 on-line price £28.00
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Series: Elgar original reference
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Description
Acclaim for the first edition:
‘Each author writes with a distinctive style, yet the work flows well because the editors selected recognized scholars with outstanding credentials. Academic libraries, especially those serving a strong social science community, will find this work a worthwhile addition. Professors of sociology and environmental studies could use the essays for additional readings and reviews.’ – Marjorie H. Jones, American Reference Books Annual
The second edition of The International Handbook of Environmental Sociology is a major interdisciplinary reference work consisting of 26 original essays. The authors are leading scholars, many of whom are intimately involved in national, regional or global environmental policy processes. Their essays mark changes and continuities in the field of environmental sociology, drawing attention to the theoretical debates and substantive concerns of today. As well as providing an assessment of the scope and content of environmental sociology, this Handbook sets out the intellectual and practical challenges posed by the urgent need for policy and action to address accelerating environmental change.
Contents
Contributors: W.M. Adams, B. Ambrose-Oji, I. Barcena Hinojal, T. Benton, R.L. Bryant, F.H. Buttel, C.N. Buzinde, J. Carmin, T. Dietz, R.E. Dunlap, A. Escobar, J.B. Foster, M.K. Goodman, N. Haenn, J. Hannigan, E.D. Hinton, M. Kousis, R. Lago Aurrekoetxea, S. Lockie, D. Manuel-Navarrete, A.P.J. Mol, R. Murphy, B.C. Parks, M.R. Redclift, J.T. Roberts, E.A. Rosa, W. Sachs, J.-G. Vaillancourt, G. Woodgate, S. Yearley, R. York
Further information
Full table of contents
Contents:
Introduction Graham Woodgate
PART I: CONCEPTS AND THEORIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY Editorial Commentary Graham Woodgate
1. The Maturation and Diversification of Environmental Sociology: From Constructivism and Realism to Agnosticism and Pragmatism Riley E. Dunlap
2. Social Institutions and Environmental Change Frederick H. Buttel
3. From Environment Sociology to Global Ecosociology: The Dunlap–Buttel Debates Jean-Guy Vaillancourt
4. Ecological Modernization as a Social Theory of Environmental Reform Arthur P.J. Mol
5. Ecological Modernization Theory: Theoretical and Empirical Challenges Richard York, Eugene A. Rosa and Thomas Dietz
6. Postconstructivist Political Ecologies Arturo Escobar
7. Marx’s Ecology and its Historical Significance John Bellamy Foster
8. The Transition Out of Carbon Dependence: The Crises of Environment and Markets Michael R. Redclift
9. Socio-ecological Agency: From ‘Human Exceptionalism’ to Coping with ‘Exceptional’ Global Environmental Change David Manuel-Navarrete and Christine N. Buzinde
10. Ecological Debt: An Integrating Concept for Socio-Environmental Change Iñaki Barcena Hinojal and Rosa Lago Aurrekoetxea 11. The Emergence Model of Environment and Society John Hannigan
12. Peering into the Abyss: Environment, Research and Absurdity in the ‘Age of Stupid’ Raymond L. Bryant
PART II: SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY Editorial Commentary Graham Woodgate
13. Animals and Us Ted Benton
14. Science and the Environment in the Twenty-first Century Steven Yearley
15. New Challenges for Twenty-first Century Environmental Movements: Agricultural Biotechnology and Nanotechnology Maria Kousis
16. Sustainable Consumption: Developments, Considerations and New Directions Emma D. Hinton and Michael K. Goodman
17. Globalisation, Convergence and the Euro-Atlantic Development Model Wolfgang Sachs
18. Environmental Hazards and Human Disasters Raymond Murphy
19. Structural Obstacles to an Effective Post-2012 Global Climate Agreement: Why Social Structure Matters and How Addressing it Can Help Break the Impasse Bradley C. Parks and J. Timmons Roberts
20. Environmental Sociology and International Forestry: Historical Overview and Future Directions Bianca Ambrose-Oji
PART III: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON ENVIRONMENT AND SOCIETY Editorial Commentary Graham Woodgate
21. The Role of Place in the Margins of Space David Manuel-Navarrete and Michael R. Redclift
22. Society, Environment and Development in Africa William M. Adams
23. Neoliberal Regimes of Environmental Governance: Climate Change, Biodiversity and Agriculture in Australia Stewart Lockie 24. Environmental Reform in Modernizing China Arthur P.J. Mol
25. Civic Engagement in Environmental Governance in Central and Eastern Europe JoAnn Carmin
26. A ‘Sustaining Conservation’ for Mexico? Nora Haenn
Index
Author's links
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