Nature, Choice and Social Power

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A01=Erica Schoenberger
Above Ground
Acid Mine Drainage
Air
Author_Erica Schoenberger
Category=JHM
Climate Change
Corn oil
Cyanide Leaching
Cyanide Process
Deep Democracy
Dense
Drawn Back
Earth
Economic power
Environmental economics
environmental history
Environmental policy
Environmental sociology
Environmental studies
EPA Drinking Water Standard
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eq_society-politics
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GARD
Geography and Environmental Engineering
Gold mining
Heap Leaching
Hydraulic Mining
Ideological power
Internal Combustion Engine
LA County
Monetary Gold
Moving Assembly Line
Natural resources
Nature
Orphan Mines
Paths to a Green World
Political economy
Political power
Post-war
Smog
Social Connection Model
Social Power
Southern Pacific Railroad
Suburban Sprawl
Sunny
Sustainability
Sustainable development
The Ecology of Place
The Political Economy of the Environment
Waste Rock
Water

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415833868
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Aug 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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We are at an environmental impasse. Many blame our personal choices about the things we consume and the way we live. This is only part of the problem. Different forms of social power - political, economic and ideological - structure the choices we have available. This book analyses how we make social and environmental history and why we end up where we do.

Using case studies from different environmental domains – earth and water, air and fire – Nature, Choice and Social Power examines the form that social power takes and how it can harm the environment and hinder our efforts to act in our own best interests. The case studies challenge conventional wisdoms about why gold is valuable, why the internal combustion engine triumphed, and when and why suburbs sprawled. The book shows how the power of individuals, the power of classes, the power of the market and the power of the state at different times and in different ways were critical to setting us on a path to environmental degradation. It also challenges conventional wisdoms about what we need to do now. Rather than reducing consumption and shrinking from outcomes we don’t want, it proposes growing towards outcomes we do want. We invested massive resources in creating our problems; it will take equally large investments to fix them.

Written in a clear and engaging style, the book is underpinned with a political economy framework and addresses how we should understand our responsibility to the environment and to each other as individuals within a large and impersonal system.

Erica Schoenberger is Professor of Geography and Environmental Engineering at Johns Hopkins University, USA.

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