- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
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.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- David J. FrancisAn Invitation to Ethnomethodology233,99 €
- Scott HarrisAn Invitation to the Sociology of Emotions31,99 €
- David Inglis (University of Helsinki)An Invitation to Social Theory26,99 €
- Houston Wood (Professor of English, Professor of English, Hawai'i PInvitation to Peace Studies124,99 €
- Chad PosickFitting the Facts of Crime: An Invitation to Biopsychosocial Criminology105,99 €
- Jason OrneAn Invitation to Qualitative Fieldwork63,99 €
- Scott HarrisAn Invitation to the Sociology of Emotions114,99 €
-
-
-
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.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: SAGE Publications Inc
- 6 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 504
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 178mm x 255mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 946g
- ISBN-13: 9781506366012
- ISBN-10: 1506366015
- Artikelnr.: 54470729
- Verlag: SAGE Publications Inc
- 6 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 504
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 178mm x 255mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 946g
- ISBN-13: 9781506366012
- ISBN-10: 1506366015
- Artikelnr.: 54470729
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.
Preface
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Environmental Problems and Society
Joining the Dialogue
Environmental Justice Across Time
Environmental Justice Across Social Space
Environmental Justice Across Species
The Social Constitution of Environmental Problems and Solutions
Part I: The Material
Chapter 2: Health and Justice
The Material Basis of the Human Condition
One Health
One Justice
Living Downstream: The Precautionary Principle
Making Ties
Chapter 3: Consumption and Materialism
The Hierarchy of Needs
Consumption, Modern Style
Goods and Sentiments
Goods and Community
The Treadmill of Consumption
Chapter 4: Money and Markets
The Growth Compulsion
The "Invisible Elbow"
Overproduction and Underproduction
The Constructed Market
Rock Steady Farm and the Economics of Optimism
Chapter 5: Technology and Science
The Monologues of Technology and Science
Technology as a Dialogue
Technological Somnambulism
Science as Dialogue
Disasters, Fast and Slow
Science and Technology as Political
Chapter 6: Population and Development
The Malthusian Argument
Population as Culture
The Inequality Critique of Malthusianism
The Technologic Critique of Malthusianism
The Demographic Critique of Malthusianism
The Environment as a Social Actor
Part II: The Ideal
Chapter 7: The Ideology of Environmental Domination
Christianity and Environmental Domination
Individualism and Environmental Domination
Heteropatriarchy and Environmental Domination
The Difference That Ideology Makes
Chapter 8: The Ideology of Environmental Concern
Ancient Beginnings
The Moral Basis of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Extent of Contemporary Environmental Concern
Two Theories of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Dialogue of Environmental Concern
Postscript
Chapter 9: The Human Nature of Nature
The Contradictions of Nature
Nature as a Social Construction
Environment as a Social Construction
The Dialogue of Nature and Ideology
Part III. The Practical
Chapter 10: Mobilizing the Just Ecological Society
Mobilizing Ecological Conceptions
Mobilizing Ecological Connections
Mobilizing Ecological Contestations
The Pros of the Three Cons
Chapter 11: Transitioning to the Just Ecological Society
Democracy and Bureaucracy
Legal Structure
The Bottom and the Top
Participatory Governance
Local Knowledge
Governing Participation
Grounding Our Knowledge
Soul Fire Farm and Just Ecological Transition
Finding Our Balance
Chapter 12: Living in the Just Ecological Society
The A-B Split
The Reconstitution of Daily Life
Reconstituting Ourselves
References
Notes
Index
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Environmental Problems and Society
Joining the Dialogue
Environmental Justice Across Time
Environmental Justice Across Social Space
Environmental Justice Across Species
The Social Constitution of Environmental Problems and Solutions
Part I: The Material
Chapter 2: Health and Justice
The Material Basis of the Human Condition
One Health
One Justice
Living Downstream: The Precautionary Principle
Making Ties
Chapter 3: Consumption and Materialism
The Hierarchy of Needs
Consumption, Modern Style
Goods and Sentiments
Goods and Community
The Treadmill of Consumption
Chapter 4: Money and Markets
The Growth Compulsion
The "Invisible Elbow"
Overproduction and Underproduction
The Constructed Market
Rock Steady Farm and the Economics of Optimism
Chapter 5: Technology and Science
The Monologues of Technology and Science
Technology as a Dialogue
Technological Somnambulism
Science as Dialogue
Disasters, Fast and Slow
Science and Technology as Political
Chapter 6: Population and Development
The Malthusian Argument
Population as Culture
The Inequality Critique of Malthusianism
The Technologic Critique of Malthusianism
The Demographic Critique of Malthusianism
The Environment as a Social Actor
Part II: The Ideal
Chapter 7: The Ideology of Environmental Domination
Christianity and Environmental Domination
Individualism and Environmental Domination
Heteropatriarchy and Environmental Domination
The Difference That Ideology Makes
Chapter 8: The Ideology of Environmental Concern
Ancient Beginnings
The Moral Basis of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Extent of Contemporary Environmental Concern
Two Theories of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Dialogue of Environmental Concern
Postscript
Chapter 9: The Human Nature of Nature
The Contradictions of Nature
Nature as a Social Construction
Environment as a Social Construction
The Dialogue of Nature and Ideology
Part III. The Practical
Chapter 10: Mobilizing the Just Ecological Society
Mobilizing Ecological Conceptions
Mobilizing Ecological Connections
Mobilizing Ecological Contestations
The Pros of the Three Cons
Chapter 11: Transitioning to the Just Ecological Society
Democracy and Bureaucracy
Legal Structure
The Bottom and the Top
Participatory Governance
Local Knowledge
Governing Participation
Grounding Our Knowledge
Soul Fire Farm and Just Ecological Transition
Finding Our Balance
Chapter 12: Living in the Just Ecological Society
The A-B Split
The Reconstitution of Daily Life
Reconstituting Ourselves
References
Notes
Index
Preface
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Environmental Problems and Society
Joining the Dialogue
Environmental Justice Across Time
Environmental Justice Across Social Space
Environmental Justice Across Species
The Social Constitution of Environmental Problems and Solutions
Part I: The Material
Chapter 2: Health and Justice
The Material Basis of the Human Condition
One Health
One Justice
Living Downstream: The Precautionary Principle
Making Ties
Chapter 3: Consumption and Materialism
The Hierarchy of Needs
Consumption, Modern Style
Goods and Sentiments
Goods and Community
The Treadmill of Consumption
Chapter 4: Money and Markets
The Growth Compulsion
The "Invisible Elbow"
Overproduction and Underproduction
The Constructed Market
Rock Steady Farm and the Economics of Optimism
Chapter 5: Technology and Science
The Monologues of Technology and Science
Technology as a Dialogue
Technological Somnambulism
Science as Dialogue
Disasters, Fast and Slow
Science and Technology as Political
Chapter 6: Population and Development
The Malthusian Argument
Population as Culture
The Inequality Critique of Malthusianism
The Technologic Critique of Malthusianism
The Demographic Critique of Malthusianism
The Environment as a Social Actor
Part II: The Ideal
Chapter 7: The Ideology of Environmental Domination
Christianity and Environmental Domination
Individualism and Environmental Domination
Heteropatriarchy and Environmental Domination
The Difference That Ideology Makes
Chapter 8: The Ideology of Environmental Concern
Ancient Beginnings
The Moral Basis of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Extent of Contemporary Environmental Concern
Two Theories of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Dialogue of Environmental Concern
Postscript
Chapter 9: The Human Nature of Nature
The Contradictions of Nature
Nature as a Social Construction
Environment as a Social Construction
The Dialogue of Nature and Ideology
Part III. The Practical
Chapter 10: Mobilizing the Just Ecological Society
Mobilizing Ecological Conceptions
Mobilizing Ecological Connections
Mobilizing Ecological Contestations
The Pros of the Three Cons
Chapter 11: Transitioning to the Just Ecological Society
Democracy and Bureaucracy
Legal Structure
The Bottom and the Top
Participatory Governance
Local Knowledge
Governing Participation
Grounding Our Knowledge
Soul Fire Farm and Just Ecological Transition
Finding Our Balance
Chapter 12: Living in the Just Ecological Society
The A-B Split
The Reconstitution of Daily Life
Reconstituting Ourselves
References
Notes
Index
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Environmental Problems and Society
Joining the Dialogue
Environmental Justice Across Time
Environmental Justice Across Social Space
Environmental Justice Across Species
The Social Constitution of Environmental Problems and Solutions
Part I: The Material
Chapter 2: Health and Justice
The Material Basis of the Human Condition
One Health
One Justice
Living Downstream: The Precautionary Principle
Making Ties
Chapter 3: Consumption and Materialism
The Hierarchy of Needs
Consumption, Modern Style
Goods and Sentiments
Goods and Community
The Treadmill of Consumption
Chapter 4: Money and Markets
The Growth Compulsion
The "Invisible Elbow"
Overproduction and Underproduction
The Constructed Market
Rock Steady Farm and the Economics of Optimism
Chapter 5: Technology and Science
The Monologues of Technology and Science
Technology as a Dialogue
Technological Somnambulism
Science as Dialogue
Disasters, Fast and Slow
Science and Technology as Political
Chapter 6: Population and Development
The Malthusian Argument
Population as Culture
The Inequality Critique of Malthusianism
The Technologic Critique of Malthusianism
The Demographic Critique of Malthusianism
The Environment as a Social Actor
Part II: The Ideal
Chapter 7: The Ideology of Environmental Domination
Christianity and Environmental Domination
Individualism and Environmental Domination
Heteropatriarchy and Environmental Domination
The Difference That Ideology Makes
Chapter 8: The Ideology of Environmental Concern
Ancient Beginnings
The Moral Basis of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Extent of Contemporary Environmental Concern
Two Theories of Contemporary Environmental Concern
The Dialogue of Environmental Concern
Postscript
Chapter 9: The Human Nature of Nature
The Contradictions of Nature
Nature as a Social Construction
Environment as a Social Construction
The Dialogue of Nature and Ideology
Part III. The Practical
Chapter 10: Mobilizing the Just Ecological Society
Mobilizing Ecological Conceptions
Mobilizing Ecological Connections
Mobilizing Ecological Contestations
The Pros of the Three Cons
Chapter 11: Transitioning to the Just Ecological Society
Democracy and Bureaucracy
Legal Structure
The Bottom and the Top
Participatory Governance
Local Knowledge
Governing Participation
Grounding Our Knowledge
Soul Fire Farm and Just Ecological Transition
Finding Our Balance
Chapter 12: Living in the Just Ecological Society
The A-B Split
The Reconstitution of Daily Life
Reconstituting Ourselves
References
Notes
Index