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Humanity & Club , 1997
Since the starting time World Day in 1970 at that place has emerged a significant body of sociological research o... more Since the showtime Earth Solar day in 1970 there has emerged a significant torso of sociological inquiry on various aspects of gild-environment relations, and along with it environmental folklore--a new sub-subject area. The basic business concern of the new sub-disciplinecenters on social change, especially change in industrial practices and governmental policies that affect environmental quality in human communities. This change is driven, amidst other things, past an environmental motion acting at local, regional, national and transnational levels to bring about transformation of society-environmentdynamics. Sociological research in this surface area is propelled by the following general question:
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Nature Environmental & Evolution
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due south will exist peer reviewed. Ix pocket-sized cash awards for the best posters in various categories (under... more s will be peer reviewed. Nine small cash awards for the best posters in diverse categories (undergraduate educatee, graduate pupil, customs and faculty) will be given. Borderline for abstracts is December 29. For farther data and to submit abstract, delight go to: http://surroundings.msu.edu/climatechange/index.html Note that the Symposium is free and open up to the public; we request that everyone register to aid our planning. The confirmed speakers are: Jeff Andresen, Michigan State University Joe Arvai, Michigan State University Bill Easterling, Penn State University Scudder Mackey, University of Windsor Linda Mortsch, Environment Canada Susi Moser, National Centre for Atmospheric Research Terry Root, Stanford Academy Joel Scheraga, U.S. Environmental Protection Bureau Steve Schneider, Stanford Academy Barry Smit, University of Guelph Elke Weber, Columbia University Julie Winkler, Michigan State Academy Constructions of Environmental Justice in Canada An edited collec...
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Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews , 2010
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JWSR Editorial Policy , 2004
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periodical of world-systems … , 2004
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journal of world-systems … , 2004
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 2019
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In the last decade, New York City has transformed its formerly industrial waterfronts into gentri... more In the terminal decade, New York City has transformed its formerly industrial waterfronts into gentrified residential neighborhoods for the sustainability class. To exercise this, the city has had to clean upward and " greenish " these spaces. We call this procedure green gentrification. It is led by the green growth machine—public officials and private investors who appropriate unre-vitalized environmental resources (like the waterfront), restore them, develop them, and repackage them for sale to the sustainability class. The sustainability class is well-educated, holds overt sustainability oriented values, tin afford sustainability themed consumption, and touts their green urbanism (such as living on the waterfront or nigh green spaces) to brand their lifestyle. In Brooklyn, in addition to light-green gentrification along the rivers, there has been light-green gentrification along the Gowanus Canal. The Gowanus is in the process of being transformed from a 1.8 mile long toxic industrial culvert, lined with calorie-free industry and low-and middle-income residents, to the " Venice of Brooklyn. " In 2010, the canal gained " Super-fund " status (a federal designation for priority hazardous waste product site remediation), which enabled the hope of a long-term clean up to make way for a Whole Foods, condo-minium development, and the sustainability class drawn to the revitalized and greened waterfront. Ironically, the green growth machine, while ostensibly creating more environmentally sustainable urban spaces, increases evolution and settlement in overflowing prone areas, a problematic trend given the growing threat of climate change. In 2012, Hurricane Sandy pushed a 13-foot storm surge into New York Harbor, destroyed housing on Staten Island, the Rockaways, and elsewhere, and left thousands of New Yorkers without shelter, heat, power, and functional transportation infrastructure for months. In Brooklyn, the storm surge pushed the bounding main up the Gowanus Culvert sending sewage-laden waters over the banks, upwardly the streets, and into the basements and footing floors of residential, industrial, and commercial spaces of the Gowanus neighborhood. Floodwater spread out more than a block on either side of the canal, submerging the proposed sites for luxury condo developments in flood zone A (a FEMA designation for areas most at gamble for flooding). Flooding and ability outages took the Gowanus Canal pumping station off line for 33 hours, causing 13 million gallons of untreated sewage to discharge into the floodwaters that covered the neighborhood. Equally the flood receded the post-obit day, the stench of
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The emergence of Sociologists Without Borders opened up new opportunities for social justice orie... more The emergence of Sociologists Without Borders opened upward new opportunities for social justice oriented intellectual appointment and collaboration. Given the opportunity to re-imagine the structure and function of professional conferences, a number of us who were focused on issues of environmental justice as a human being right came together in 2006 to challenge the traditional model of series paper presentations at console sessions. The collaborative dialogue panel brings together sociologists focused on a specific social trouble or upshot, and asks them to work together to generate questions and answers in a public forum in dialogue with each other and with others attention a session. The goals of a collaborative dialogue panel are to supplant serial monologues with sustained dialogue, address critical social problems, and to invite meaningful interaction between panelists and other participants. The idea is to maximize the unique benefits of bringing a grouping of engaged intellectuals physically together (at great ecological toll) to accost social issues, and to go out the reading of papers to other times and places. I had idea for quite some fourth dimension that our traditional academic model of conference console newspaper presentations was blowsy, inefficient, and quite frankly, colossally tedious. Don't become me wrong, I think that it is of import that we share our work, substitution ideas, talk over our data, methods, and theories, and become to know each other. I had simply become decreasingly convinced that the standard American Sociological Association (ASA) model adult a century agone or earlier, was getting the job done as finer as possible. In the digital age, there really is no reason that we should all take to travel hundreds or thousands of miles to gather in windowless rooms to heed to each other read summaries of our most recent research papers (and given the long pb time in submission deadlines,
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This paper explores the extent to which ecotourism development provides sufficient economic incen... more This paper explores the extent to which ecotourism development provides sufficient economical incentive to preclude ecologically problematic resource extraction. Global demand incentivizes 'extreme' oil drilling in ecologically sensitive locations. As deposits are discovered, states are tested in their commitments to sustainable development. Oil discoveries in Belize threaten the socio-ecology dynamics supporting sustainable evolution in a land dependent on ecotourism, with a land that demonstrated commitment to ecology protection. Incorporation of Belize into a cruise ship-based mass tourism economy simultaneous with oil discovery further erodes incentives for a strong ecology protection regime. At pale is a uniquely biodiverse location including the world's largest intact barrier reef, and the larger implications for the willingness and capacity of states, individual capital, and civil society to protect ecosystems in a fossil fuel and growth-dependent global economy. Based on extensive fieldwork, this research illustrates ways that extractivism is shifting the political–economic dynamics underlying efforts to establish and maintain a more sustainable development trajectory. While the Belizean state has been quick to shift from a commitment to ecotourism-based development to promotion of extraction, the combined efforts of conservation organizations and ecotourism-based individual capital take provided a counterweight to the total reorientation of state development strategies.
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Societies Without Borders , 2007
... Page four. Effigy 1. EMS. Photograph by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borde... more ... Page four. Figure ane. Ems. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ... Effigy two. Superdome window "Here from Austin". Photo past TammyLewis. Folio 6. 180 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ...
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Societies without Borders , 2007
... Page four. Figure ane. EMS. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borde... more ... Page 4. Figure 1. Ems. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ... Figure ii. Superdome window "Here from Austin". Photograph by TammyLewis. Folio 6. 180 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ...
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This article is structured to answer a number of questions that have been raised over the years a... more This article is structured to answer a number of questions that have been raised over the years about the origin, construction, and awarding of the treadmill of production theory. The post-obit questions are addressed: What was the theoretical construction of the treadmill of production? Why does the theory focus on production rather than consumption? Was the treadmill a dialectical or a linear change theory? How has the treadmill theory changed under the growing globalization of production since 1980? Has the treadmill been evaluated empirically? What forces have limited the diffusion of the treadmill in ecology folklore? Is the treadmill more/nevertheless useful today for ecological analyses? For social analyses? The treadmill of product was a theory introduced by Schnaiberg (1980) to address the question of why U.S. ecology degradation had increased and then apace after Earth War II. He argued that a growing level of capital available for investments and the irresolute resource allotment of such capital investment together produced a substantial increase in demand for natural resources. Essentially, the major changes outlined by the theory were that more uppercase was becoming accumulated in Western economies, and this capital was being practical to replacing product labor with new technologies to increase profits. These new technologies required far more free energy and/or chemicals to replace earlier more labor-intensive processes. New technologies emerged from the organisation of scientific and technological enquiry in universities and research institutes, besides as in the new " research and evolution " departments of large firms. Moreover, unlike the prior use of labor, the new technologies represented forms of sunken capital. To farther increase profits , managers needed to increase the levels of product and sustain higher levels
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Nanotechnology is promoted as a solution to bug as diverse as globe hunger, energy dependenc... more Nanotechnology is promoted as a solution to problems as diverse equally world hunger, energy dependence, and environmental
degradation. Nanotechnology research aims to provide new materials, product processes, and military machine and commercial
applications that will transform social relations and economies. While some view nanotechnology as advancing ecological
modernization, this analysis of science funding structures, priorities, and institutional goals raises the business that the past
decade of nanotechnology investment has served to accelerate the Treadmill of Production. The transnational race to
develop nanotechnological capacity provides an opportunity to examine how scientific potential is developed and unleashed,
and to what ends. Investment patterns in nanotechnology research demonstrate an emphasis on product science, and
relatively little attention to bear on scientific discipline aimed at understanding the environmental and public health risks nanotechnology
may pose. The event of that skewed allocation of research dollars is that nanotechnology inquiry, which might be
harnessed to meliorate sustainability, has instead decreased the capacity of social systems to cover and respond to
changes in ecosystems.
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Arrangement & Environment , 2004
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Humanity & Society , 1997
Since the starting time Earth Day in 1970 at that place has emerged a significant body of sociological enquiry o... more Since the outset Earth Day in 1970 there has emerged a significant body of sociological enquiry on diverse aspects of society-surroundings relations, and along with it environmental sociology--a new sub-discipline. The basic concern of the new sub-disciplinecenters on social modify, especially change in industrial practices and governmental policies that affect environmental quality in human communities. This alter is driven, amidst other things, past an ecology move interim at local, regional, national and transnational levels to bring about transformation of society-environmentdynamics. Sociological research in this surface area is propelled by the following full general question:
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Nature Ecology & Development
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due south volition exist peer reviewed. Nine small greenbacks awards for the best posters in various categories (nether... more than s volition be peer reviewed. Ix small greenbacks awards for the best posters in various categories (undergraduate student, graduate student, community and faculty) will be given. Deadline for abstracts is December 29. For further data and to submit abstract, please go to: http://environment.msu.edu/climatechange/index.html Note that the Symposium is free and open up to the public; we request that everyone register to aid our planning. The confirmed speakers are: Jeff Andresen, Michigan State University Joe Arvai, Michigan State University Bill Easterling, Penn State University Scudder Mackey, Academy of Windsor Linda Mortsch, Surround Canada Susi Moser, National Middle for Atmospheric Research Terry Root, Stanford University Joel Scheraga, U.South. Ecology Protection Bureau Steve Schneider, Stanford University Barry Smit, University of Guelph Elke Weber, Columbia University Julie Winkler, Michigan State Academy Constructions of Environmental Justice in Canada An edited collec...
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Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews , 2010
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JWSR Editorial Policy , 2004
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journal of globe-systems … , 2004
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journal of earth-systems … , 2004
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 2019
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In the final decade, New York Urban center has transformed its formerly industrial waterfronts into gentri... more In the last decade, New York City has transformed its formerly industrial waterfronts into gentrified residential neighborhoods for the sustainability class. To practise this, the city has had to clean upward and " green " these spaces. We call this process dark-green gentrification. It is led past the green growth machine—public officials and private investors who appropriate unre-vitalized environmental resources (like the waterfront), restore them, develop them, and repackage them for sale to the sustainability grade. The sustainability class is well-educated, holds overt sustainability oriented values, can beget sustainability themed consumption, and touts their green urbanism (such as living on the waterfront or almost light-green spaces) to brand their lifestyle. In Brooklyn, in improver to greenish gentrification along the rivers, there has been green gentrification along the Gowanus Canal. The Gowanus is in the process of being transformed from a 1.8 mile long toxic industrial canal, lined with light manufacture and depression-and middle-income residents, to the " Venice of Brooklyn. " In 2010, the culvert gained " Super-fund " status (a federal designation for priority hazardous waste site remediation), which enabled the promise of a long-term clean upward to brand way for a Whole Foods, condo-minium development, and the sustainability course drawn to the revitalized and greened waterfront. Ironically, the green growth car, while ostensibly creating more environmentally sustainable urban spaces, increases development and settlement in inundation prone areas, a problematic tendency given the growing threat of climate alter. In 2012, Hurricane Sandy pushed a 13-foot storm surge into New York Harbor, destroyed housing on Staten Island, the Rockaways, and elsewhere, and left thousands of New Yorkers without shelter, heat, ability, and functional transportation infrastructure for months. In Brooklyn, the storm surge pushed the sea up the Gowanus Canal sending sewage-laden waters over the banks, upwardly the streets, and into the basements and ground floors of residential, industrial, and commercial spaces of the Gowanus neighborhood. Floodwater spread out more a block on either side of the canal, submerging the proposed sites for luxury condo developments in alluvion zone A (a FEMA designation for areas nearly at risk for flooding). Flooding and ability outages took the Gowanus Canal pumping station off line for 33 hours, causing xiii million gallons of untreated sewage to discharge into the floodwaters that covered the neighborhood. As the flood receded the post-obit day, the stench of
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The emergence of Sociologists Without Borders opened up new opportunities for social justice orie... more The emergence of Sociologists Without Borders opened up new opportunities for social justice oriented intellectual engagement and collaboration. Given the opportunity to re-imagine the structure and part of professional conferences, a number of us who were focused on issues of environmental justice as a homo correct came together in 2006 to challenge the traditional model of serial paper presentations at panel sessions. The collaborative dialogue console brings together sociologists focused on a specific social problem or issue, and asks them to work together to generate questions and answers in a public forum in dialogue with each other and with others attention a session. The goals of a collaborative dialogue console are to supersede series monologues with sustained dialogue, accost critical social bug, and to invite meaningful interaction between panelists and other participants. The idea is to maximize the unique benefits of bringing a group of engaged intellectuals physically together (at great ecological cost) to address social bug, and to leave the reading of papers to other times and places. I had thought for quite some time that our traditional academic model of briefing panel paper presentations was antiquated, inefficient, and quite frankly, colossally ho-hum. Don't go me wrong, I think that it is important that we share our work, exchange ideas, hash out our data, methods, and theories, and become to know each other. I had just get decreasingly convinced that the standard American Sociological Clan (ASA) model developed a century ago or earlier, was getting the job done as finer as possible. In the digital age, there really is no reason that we should all take to travel hundreds or thousands of miles to gather in windowless rooms to listen to each other read summaries of our most recent enquiry papers (and given the long pb fourth dimension in submission deadlines,
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This paper explores the extent to which ecotourism development provides sufficient economic incen... more This newspaper explores the extent to which ecotourism development provides sufficient economic incentive to preclude ecologically problematic resource extraction. Global demand incentivizes 'farthermost' oil drilling in ecologically sensitive locations. Equally deposits are discovered, states are tested in their commitments to sustainable development. Oil discoveries in Belize threaten the socio-environmental dynamics supporting sustainable development in a land dependent on ecotourism, with a country that demonstrated commitment to environmental protection. Incorporation of Belize into a cruise send-based mass tourism economy simultaneous with oil discovery further erodes incentives for a potent environmental protection regime. At stake is a uniquely biodiverse location including the earth'southward largest intact barrier reef, and the larger implications for the willingness and capacity of states, private capital, and civil society to protect ecosystems in a fossil fuel and growth-dependent global economic system. Based on extensive fieldwork, this enquiry illustrates means that extractivism is shifting the political–economic dynamics underlying efforts to establish and maintain a more sustainable development trajectory. While the Belizean state has been quick to shift from a commitment to ecotourism-based development to promotion of extraction, the combined efforts of conservation organizations and ecotourism-based private capital letter have provided a counterweight to the full reorientation of state evolution strategies.
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Societies Without Borders , 2007
... Page iv. Effigy ane. EMS. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borde... more ... Page 4. Figure i. Ems. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ... Effigy 2. Superdome window "Here from Austin". Photograph past TammyLewis. Folio half-dozen. 180 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ...
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Societies without Borders , 2007
... Page 4. Figure 1. European monetary system. Photo by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borde... more ... Page four. Effigy i. European monetary system. Photograph by Tammy Lewis. 178 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ... Effigy 2. Superdome window "Hither from Austin". Photo past TammyLewis. Page 6. 180 KA Gould, TL Lewis / Societies Without Borders 2 (2007) 175197 ...
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This commodity is structured to answer a number of questions that have been raised over the years a... more than This article is structured to reply a number of questions that have been raised over the years nigh the origin, construction, and application of the treadmill of product theory. The following questions are addressed: What was the theoretical structure of the treadmill of production? Why does the theory focus on production rather than consumption? Was the treadmill a dialectical or a linear change theory? How has the treadmill theory inverse under the growing globalization of production since 1980? Has the treadmill been evaluated empirically? What forces accept limited the diffusion of the treadmill in environmental sociology? Is the treadmill more/yet useful today for ecological analyses? For social analyses? The treadmill of product was a theory introduced by Schnaiberg (1980) to address the question of why U.S. ecology degradation had increased and then speedily after Earth War II. He argued that a growing level of capital available for investments and the changing allocation of such capital investment together produced a substantial increase in need for natural resources. Essentially, the major changes outlined by the theory were that more capital letter was becoming accumulated in Western economies, and this capital was being applied to replacing production labor with new technologies to increment profits. These new technologies required far more energy and/or chemicals to supplant before more labor-intensive processes. New technologies emerged from the organization of scientific and technological research in universities and research institutes, as well as in the new " research and development " departments of large firms. Moreover, unlike the prior use of labor, the new technologies represented forms of sunken capital. To farther increase profits , managers needed to increment the levels of product and sustain higher levels
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Nanotechnology is promoted as a solution to problems as various equally earth hunger, energy dependenc... more than Nanotechnology is promoted every bit a solution to bug as diverse as world hunger, energy dependence, and ecology
degradation. Nanotechnology inquiry aims to provide new materials, product processes, and military and commercial
applications that volition transform social relations and economies. While some view nanotechnology every bit advancing ecological
modernization, this assay of science funding structures, priorities, and institutional goals raises the concern that the by
decade of nanotechnology investment has served to advance the Treadmill of Production. The transnational race to
develop nanotechnological capacity provides an opportunity to examine how scientific potential is developed and unleashed,
and to what ends. Investment patterns in nanotechnology inquiry demonstrate an emphasis on production science, and
relatively little attention to impact science aimed at understanding the environmental and public wellness risks nanotechnology
may pose. The result of that skewed allocation of research dollars is that nanotechnology research, which might exist
harnessed to improve sustainability, has instead decreased the chapters of social systems to comprehend and respond to
changes in ecosystems.
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Organization & Surround , 2004
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Source: https://brooklyn-cuny.academia.edu/KennethGould
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