Environmental sociology : European perspectives and interdisciplinary challenges
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Bibliographic Information
Environmental sociology : European perspectives and interdisciplinary challenges
Springer, c2010
- : hardback
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Despite being a relatively young sub-discipline, European environmental sociology has changed considerably in the last decades towards more interdisciplinary collaborations and problem solving. Current trends such as global environmental modernization and processes of economic, political and socio-cultural globalization, fuelled by developments of transport, environmental flows, scientific uncertainty, and information technologies, have fostered new conceptual approaches that move beyond classical sociological mind-sets toward broader attempts to connect to other disciplines.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: New Trends and Interdisciplinarity Challenges in Environmental Sociology.- PART 1: Natural Flows and Global Environmental Discourse.- 2. Social Theories of Environmental Reform: Towards a Third Generation.- 3. The New Climate Change Discourse: A Challenge for Environmental Sociology.- 4. Earth System Governance and the Social Sciences.- 5. Ecological Regimes: Towards a Conceptual Integration of the Biophysical Environment into Social Theory.- PART II: Exploring Limits and New Possibilities for Understanding Environmental Rationalities.- 6. Understanding Responses to the Environmental and Ethical Aspects of Innovative Technologies: The Case of Synthetic Biology in Europe.- 7. Social Simulation: A Method to Investigate Environmental Change from a Social Science Perspective.- 8. Trust and Cooperation as Requirements for Maintaining Environmental Governance Capacity.- 9. Rational Choice Theory and the Environment: Variants, Applications, and New Trends.- 10. Environmental Knowledge and Deliberative Democracy.- PART III: Transdisciplinarity and Sustainable Development.- 11. Knowledge and Social Learning for Sustainable Development.- 12. Beyond Neocorporatism?! Transdisciplinary Case Studies as a Means for Collaborative Learning in Sustainable Development.- 13. Social Practices and Sustainable Consumption: Benefits and Limitations of a New Theoretical Approach.- 14. (Im)mobility and Environment-Society Relations: Arguments for and Against the 'Mobilisation' of Environmental Sociology.- PART IV: Ecological Adaptation Policies and Social Experimentation.- 15. Environmental Sustainability as Challenge for Media and Journalism.- 16. The Experimental Turn in Environmental Sociology: Pragmatism and New Forms of Governance.- 17. Risk, Society and Environmental Policy: Risk Governance in a Complex World.- 18. Climate Change and Society: Communicating Adaptation.- PART V: CodaChapter.- 19. Moving Ahead: Environmental Sociology's Contribution to Inter- and Transdisciplinary Research.- Index.
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