Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Environmental sociology'
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Goldblatt, David Steven. "Social theory and the environment : an analysis of the writings of Giddens, Gorz and Habermas on environmental degradation and environmental politics." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1993. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272672.
Full textWishart, William. "Underdeveloping Appalachia: Toward an Environmental Sociology of Extractive Economies." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/18414.
Full text2016-09-29
Bunyak, Garrett M. "Legitimization of Environmental Problems in Newsmagazines: Power, Propaganda, and the Environment." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1275514294.
Full textDresbach, Sereana Lynn Howard. "Commitment and volunteer organizations : variables influencing participation in environmental organizations." Connect to resource, 1992. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1239984724.
Full textHolleman, Hannah, and Hannah Holleman. "Energy Justice and Foundations for a Sustainable Sociology of Energy." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12419.
Full textFoster, Alec. "EVERYDAY IDENTITIES, EVERYDAY ENVIRONMENTS: URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL GEOGRAPHIES OF PHILADELPHIA." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2016. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/396150.
Full textPh.D.
This study examines the environmental identity processes of Philadelphians involved in volunteer local everyday urban environmental stewardship through tree plantings and prunings, urban gardening, and neighborhood cleanups. A hybrid theoretical framework for environmental identities that simultaneously incorporates structural, discursive, and material concerns through the ground of everyday life was adapted from the political ecology of the body developed by Hayes-Conroy and Hayes-Conroy (2013). Three qualitative methodological techniques were performed: in depth interviews, participatory observation, and neighborhood walking tours. Results highlight the emotional and affective connections that participants held with their neighborhoods, neighbors and other participants, and trees and other nonhuman others.
Temple University--Theses
Lykes, Valerie A. "Local environmental attitudes, global environmental attitudes, and religion| An analysis in 47 nations." Thesis, University of Nevada, Reno, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10126141.
Full textReligion as culture shapes the worldview of its subscribers and thence attitude formation and preferences of individuals towards many topics including the environment. Research interest in the impact of religion soared in the late 1960s, in response to White's (1967) article in Science claiming that a huge burden of guilt for the environment crisis rested on the shoulders of Christianity. Although this Dominion Hypothesis highlights the contrast between Christianity and other religions, the contrast has not been addressed in systematic comparative cross-national research assessing whether Christians hold more negative environmental attitudes than other world religions. This dissertation fills that research gap. The Dominion Hypothesis does not exhaust the potential impacts of religion on environmentalism. For example, social psychology posits the importance of experience as well as of culture on attitudes about matters one encounters directly, so the dissertation posits the Direct Experience Hypothesis and confirms the differentiation of local from global environmental attitudes. Moreover, social psychology also directs our attention to the Reverence Hypothesis, that a subjective side effect of religiosity is reverence and responsibility for nature. To address the Dominion Hypothesis that Christians hold less environmentalist attitudes than their peers in other religious traditions, the direct experience effect, and the Reverence Hypothesis, this dissertation includes descriptive analysis, psychometric scale evaluations, OLS regression, and multilevel modeling of data from the pooled World Values Survey/European Values Survey. Findings are mixed on the Dominion Hypothesis, but consistently support the Direct Experience and Reverence Hypotheses.
Gruber, Holli. "Emotions in Environmental Discourses - Analysing the Insect Decline in Germany." Thesis, Örebro universitet, Institutionen för humaniora, utbildnings- och samhällsvetenskap, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-67591.
Full textKuziak, Natalya. "The environmental impact of the winter Olympic games." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/10967.
Full textBrandon, Gwendolyn R. "Factors affecting relationships between environmental concerns and related actions." Thesis, Imperial College London, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.261198.
Full textDowney, Liam Christopher Francis. "Environmental inequality: Race, income, and industrial pollution in Detroit." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/284144.
Full textSchnack, Darcy Lynn Lybeck. "Environmental Attitudes, Intentions, and Behavior: Informing Conservation Education, Policies, and Programs in the U.S. Military." Thesis, Boston College, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108399.
Full textThe Department of Defense not only acknowledges the current ramifications of climate change but also recognizes the threat it poses to U.S. national security. The Department of Defense is a major domestic and international organization, and despite the Department’s impact in many areas, including the environment, the relationship between national security and environmental concern has not been studied nearly to the extent it could. Furthermore, no study using data from a large military organization exists that could help the Department of Defense progress toward the sustainability it desires. This dissertation addresses this problem by reviewing the U.S. Army’s greening directives and initiatives and providing a short history of these efforts at the United States Military Academy. It examines how and why attitudes, intentions, and behavior regarding the environment differ among military, both ROTC and West Point cadets, and civilian college students, and whether they view environmental problems to be a threat to our national security. This project has five broad findings of interest. First, the relationship between environmental attitudes and environmental behaviors and intentions remained as predicted and was always strongly significant. Second, ROTC cadets were never significantly different in their survey responses when compared with civilian students, and USMA cadets were rarely different. Third, civilian students’ political views were almost never significantly related to their environmental attitudes, behaviors, or intentions, while military cadets’ political views were always significantly related to lower scores on the environmental attitude scale. Fourth, being a U.S. Military Academy cadet, compared to civilian students, was significantly related to stronger agreement with the statement that the so-called ‘ecological crisis’ facing humankind is a threat to the United States’ national security. Fifth, women were more likely than men to report higher scores on the environmental attitude scale and make a special effort to recycle but also more likely than men to express weaker agreement with the statement that the ecological crisis is a threat to national security. This project has the potential to inform the military’s conservation policies and programs, while the military is uniquely positioned to be an agent of change in the efforts to combat climate change
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2019
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: Sociology
Bacchiegga, Fábio 1980. "Desvendando o campo da sociologia ambiental = revisão de artigos selecionados." [s.n.], 2011. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/278755.
Full textDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas
Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-18T00:14:49Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Bacchiegga_Fabio_M.pdf: 1357263 bytes, checksum: fce6ca837d7dc483dad3566f0dc8a003 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011
Resumo: A temática ambiental tornou-se objeto de ampla reflexão nas últimas décadas, pautanto debates, delimitando e consolidando uma sólida presença, em especial nos debates acadêmicos. Surge nos anos 1960, dentro de um contexto histórico muito específico - de contra cultura e críticas ao modelo de desenvolvimento predatório vigente - e chega ao Brasil nos anos 1970, assumindo uma face singular, agora como uma crítica ao fim do "Milagre Econômico" e aos impactos ambientais resultantes dessa opção de crescimento. Conhecer seu processo de institucionalização é importante para compreender como a Sociologia Ambiental deixa o status de subcampo de áreas da Sociologia, como a rural, e conquista um campo específico. Este projeto, que é parte integrante do trabalho "A Questão Ambiental, Interdisciplinaridade, Teoria Social e Produção Intelectual na América Latina" (NEPAM/UNICAMP) desenvolvido desde 2006, visa analisar os artigos a respeito da temática "Ambiente e Sociedade" publicado nas principais revista relacionadas a área de Humanidades do Brasil de 1980 até 2007, a partir do método de Análise de Conteúdo, e assim colaborar para a compreensão do processo de (re)fazer da Sociologia Ambiental como área especifica do pensamento sociológico
Abstract: The environmental issue has become the object of broad discussion in recent decades it was the subject of debate, delimiting and building a solid presence, especially in academic. Emerged during the 1960s, within a very specific historical context - counterculture and criticisms of the current predatory model of development - and arrives in Brazil about 1970, assuming a singular face, now as a criticism of the end of the "Economic Miracle" and the environmental impacts resulting from this development option. Knowing the process of institutionalization is important to understand how environmental sociology leaves the status subfield areas of sociology, such as rural, and achieves a specific field. This project, which is part of the work, "The Environmental Issue, Interdisciplinary, Social Theory and Intellectual Production in Latin America" (NEPAM/UNICAMP) developed since 2006, aims at analyzing the articles on the theme "Environment and Society" published in major journals related to the Humanities area of Brazil 1980 to 2007, from the method "Content Analysis", and thus contribute to understanding the process of (re) making of Environmental Sociology as a specific area of sociological thought
Mestrado
Sociologia
Mestre em Sociologia
Purkis, Jonathan. "A sociology of environmental protest : Earth First and the theory and practice of anarchism." Thesis, Manchester Metropolitan University, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.341396.
Full textMiller, Melanie Joy. "Extension and the Adoption of Environmental Technologies in the Parismina Watershed, Costa Rica." The Ohio State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1396361469.
Full textClement, Matthew. "Local Growth and Land Use Intensification: A Sociological Study of Urbanization and Environmental Change." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19269.
Full textAndrews, Laura. "God Is Great, God Is Green: Evangelical And Mainline Protestants In The Environmental Movement." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/338710.
Full textBartley, Timothy William. "Certifying forests and factories: The emergence of private systems for regulating labor and environmental conditions." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280343.
Full textTaylor, Matthew D. "Living in meaning and matter : the double embedding of agency in society and nature and the possibility of a sociology of sustainability." Thesis, University of Kent, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250310.
Full textTörnqvist, Johanna. "Källsortera mot en hållbar utveckling : En kvantitativ undersökning om källsorteringsvanor hos Halmstads invånare." Thesis, Högskolan i Halmstad, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-45104.
Full textToday there is a bigger awareness when it comes to the climate and the work towards sustainable development has increased. A large part of the waste is not taken care of properly today which means that a large source of energy conversion is not taken care of. A collaboration between the management of waste and the inhabitants attitude to recycle, is a way of achieving sustainable societal development. The problem with waste is in turn about how each person recycle today and that there is a potential for improvement in it. Recycling is obvious to some people but not for everyone, this study aims to use a quantitative survey to answer the questions and investigate how Halmstads residents view of recycling and their recycling habits. The theoretical perspectives covered in the study are the risk society, environmental sociology and collective consciousness The study shows that there are various factors that play a role in recycling and in particular the sorting of food waste.
Willis, Sean C. "A review of the locus of control construct in relation to environmental education program participation." DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 1994. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/493.
Full textHein, James Everett. "Elites and the Global Warming Conflict: Directors of Pro-Environmental and Anti-Global Warming Organizations." The Ohio State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1406810504.
Full textMalloy, Douglas Alan. "Who Wins and Who Loses? A Community Approach to Understanding the Well-being of Boomtown Residents." DigitalCommons@USU, 2010. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/757.
Full textEhlts, Becky. "The Process of Becoming a Songwriter: A Qualitative Analysis of Self-Perceptions and Early Environmental Experiences." TopSCHOLAR®, 1999. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/749.
Full textAnderson, T. J. "Environmental perception and residential decision-making : Some conceptual problems and empirical investigations in Belfast." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1985. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.372949.
Full textKersten, Ellen Elisabeth. "Spatial Triage| Data, Methods, and Opportunities to Advance Health Equity." Thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3686356.
Full textThis dissertation examines whether spatial measures of health determinants and health outcomes are being used appropriately and effectively to improve the health of marginalized populations in the United States. I concentrate on three spatial measures that have received significant policy and regulatory attention in California and nationally: access to healthful foods, climate change, and housing quality. I find that measures of these health determinants have both significant limitations and unrealized potential for addressing health disparities and promoting health equity.
I define spatial triage as a process of using spatial data to screen or select place-based communities for targeted investments, policy action, and/or regulatory attention. Chapter 1 describes the historical context of spatial triage and how it relates to ongoing health equity research and policy. In Chapter 2, I evaluate spatial measures of community nutrition environments by comparing data from in-person store surveys against data from a commercial database. I find that stores in neighborhoods with higher population density or higher percentage of people of color have lower availability of healthful foods and that inaccuracies in commercial databases may produce biased measures of healthful food availability.
Chapter 3 focuses on spatial measures of climate change vulnerability. I find that currently used spatial measures of "disadvantaged communities" ignore many important factors, such as community assets, region-specific risks, and occupation-based hazards that contribute to place-based vulnerability. I draw from examples of successful actions by community-based environmental justice organizations and reframe "disadvantaged" communities as sites of solutions where innovative programs are being used to simultaneously address climate mitigation, adaptation, and equity goals.
In Chapter 4, I combine electronic health records, public housing locations, and census data to evaluate patterns of healthcare utilization and health outcomes for low-income children in San Francisco. I find that children who live in redeveloped public housing are less likely to have more than one acute care hospital visit within a year than children who live in older, traditional public housing. These results demonstrate how integrating patient-level data across hospitals and with data from other sectors can identify new types of place-based health disparities. Chapter 5 details recommendations for analytic, participatory, and cross-sector approaches to guide the development and implementation of more effective health equity research and policy.
Belton, Lorien R. "Factors Related to Success and Participants’ Psychological Ownership in Collaborative Wildlife Management: A Survey of Sage-Grouse Local Working Groups." DigitalCommons@USU, 2008. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/116.
Full textCrane, Natasha. "Environmental justice and public participation: Implementing source water protection in eastern Ontario." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/28073.
Full textAunio, Anna-Liisa. "Changing the climate: international environmental institutions, non-governmental organizations and mobilization in a post-Kyoto world." Thesis, McGill University, 2009. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=40695.
Full textDans cette étude, je définie et évalue l’institutionnalisation d’organisations non-gouvernementales (ONG) sous des politiques transnationales en examinant la Convention-cadre des Nations Unies sur les changements climatiques (CCNUCC) et sa relation avec l’accréditation d’ONG, de 1991 à 2007. Je combine observation participante, entrevues et analyse des réseaux dans le but d’évaluer l’institutionnalisation comme faisant partie d’une politique multi-niveaux, dans laquelle les ONG interagissent avec les états et les institutions internationaux, à l’échelle locale et internationale. Intégrée dans cette analyse est l’étude du Réseau action climatique (RAC) au Canada et aux États-Unis, suivant la ratification du Canada et la non-ratification des États-Unis du protocole de Kyoto.En évaluant les dynamiques intra et inter-organisationelles des ONGs dans les négociations du CCNUCC, je démontre que les coalitions transnationales seraient une des premières façons pour les ONG de s’institutionnaliser dans les politiques transnationales. En évaluant la construction des identités de l’initié et du profane à l’intérieur d’une coalition transnationale (RAC), je démontre que les initiés promeuvent leurs identités en effectuant du « travail émotif » de la mobilisation autour de la Conférence sur les changements climatiques de Montréal, Canada, en 2005. La promotion de leurs rôles, ainsi que leurs relations entre elles, ont redéfini les frontières entre politiques institutionnalisées et politiques contentieuses. Finalement, je démontre comment l’institutionnalisation du RAC sous le CCNUCC s’est détériorée au Canada, après la ratification du Canada au protocole de Kyoto, en servant de coalition cohésive et an s’impliquant dans les politiques institutionnalisées. Aux États-Unis, par ailleurs, les organisations du RAC se sont tournées vers des relations avec des non-initiés du RAC et se sont engagées dans$
Scholz, Stephane. "GLOBALIZATION AND CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSION TRAJECTORIES IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, 1980-2006." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/202970.
Full textRaymundo, Maria Henriqueta Andrade. "Educação ambiental na serra do Itapety Mogi das Cruzes - SP construindo uma agenda 21 local." Universidade de São Paulo, 2002. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/11/11150/tde-22072002-083438/.
Full textA research technique is built based on educational process that aims public involvement to develop subsidies for better conditions of the quality life for the community, as well as the conservation of natural, historical and cultural resources of the Itapety Mountain Range a Atlantic Forest area, located the municipality of Mogi das Cruzes, São Paulo State, Brazil. Different sectors of civil society and government are involved to create a local Agenda 21. This situation permits the development of a qualitative research, resulting in a series of actions that aims to create a stronger conscientiousness of the importance of natural resources and the quality of life. The level of comprehension of local residents of Itapety Mountain Range about their environment and the ways and reasons of participation of other people in the process of building up the Agenda 21 were analised. The result of this analysis shows the existence of a wide range of opinions, perceptions and sugestions, defined as technical, academical, political and popular views. These views interwoved in a reflexive approach should produce a viable construction of the local Agenda 21.
Passewitz, Gregory R. "Social Exchange Theory and Volunteer Organizations: Patterns of Participation in Four Environmental/Natural Resource Organizations." The Ohio State University, 1991. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1392653996.
Full textLarsson, Marie, and Lina Sjöqvist. "Bland guldkorn och grus -En kvalitativ studie om andrahandskonsumenters konsumtionsvanor." Thesis, Örebro universitet, Institutionen för humaniora, utbildnings- och samhällsvetenskap, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-83516.
Full textUnder de senaste åren har det ökade intresset för miljön och den tekniska utvecklingen öppnat upp nya möjligheter att andrahandskonsumera. Stigmat kring andrahandskonsumtion beskrivs numera som något förgånget. Syftet med denna studie är att bidra till förståelsen av andrahandskonsumtion som fenomen. Detta utifrån frågeställningarna hur andrahandskonsumtion interagerar med konsumtionssamhällets ideal samt vad andrahandskonsumenter kan tänka sig att köpa respektive inte köpa begagnat och vad detta kan bero på. Tidigare forskning har visat hur andrahandsvaran väljs för sitt värde i förhållande till varans pris, hur andrahandskonsumtion kan bidra till överkonsumtion samt hur det upplevda hotet från den tidigare ägaren påverkar andrahandsvaran. Denna studie, som baseras på kvalitativa intervjuer med andrahandskonsumerande studenter, visar hur andrahandskonsumtion möjliggör för fattiga konsumenter att konsumera enligt normen. Resultatet visar även att andrahandskonsumtion möjliggör för miljömedvetna konsumenter att med gott samvete följa konsumtionssamhällets ideal samt att det ännu finns ett stigma kring andrahandskonsumtion. Detta stigma tycks dock befinna sig i en omvärderingsprocess på både individ och samhällsnivå.
Martins, Rodrigo Constante. "A construção social do valor econômico da água: estudo sociológico sobre agricultura, ruralidade e valoração ambiental no Estado de São Paulo." Universidade de São Paulo, 2004. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/18/18139/tde-04042016-102956/.
Full textThis is a sociological thesis about ways of social assimilating of new institutional inovations for the regulation of the use and access to water resources. It seeks to make an effort to obtain a knowledge dialogue with the fields of economy, philosophy, anthropology, human geography, agronomy, ecology and environmental laws. The thesis\'s general presentation consists of a critical theoretical review about the neoclassical principle of environmental valuation and the presentation of two case studies about the possible impacts that the water valuation policy will bring to the agriculture in São Paulo state. In the theoretical review, the thesis discusses the necessity of elaborating alternative strategies for the interpretation of the modern social and environmental conflicts. It proposes to overcome the formalist approaches of modeling in the relation society-nature. In the case studies, the thesis presents different possibilities of adjustment among different territorial configurations - with specific relations of material production and the exertion of the social power - and the aims of the water valuation principles. The general conclusions of the work point to a criticism to the institutional intervention of environmental policy based on models of suposedly rational bahaviors of agents and/or social groups.
Rickson, Kara E. "Unsettled Settlements of Environmental Risk: Accounting for hazardous legacies, risky environments, and settlement exposures." Thesis, Griffith University, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10072/397587.
Full textThesis (PhD Doctorate)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
School of Environment and Sc
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Awumbila, Mariama. "Women and change in Ghana : the impact of environmental change and economic crisis on rural women's time use." Thesis, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/10443/370.
Full textAndersson, Rickard. "The politics of resilience : A qualitative analysis of resilience theory as an environmental discourse." Thesis, Stockholm University, Department of Sociology, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-8427.
Full textDuring recent years, resilience theory – originally developed in systems ecology – has advanced as a new approach to sustainable development. However, it is still more of an academic theory than a discourse informing environmental politics. The aim of this essay is to study resilience theory as a potential environmental discourse in the making and to outline the political implications it might induce. To gain a more comprehensive knowledge of resilience theory, I study it in relation to already existing environmental discourses. Following earlier research on environmental discourses I define the discourses of ecological modernization, green governmentality and civic environmentalism as occupying the discursive space of environmental politics. Further, I define six central components as characteristics for all environmental discourses. Outlining how both the existing environmental discourses and resilience theory relates to these components enables an understanding of both the political implications of resilience theory and of resilience theory as an environmental discourse in relation to existing environmental discourses. The six central discourse components I define are 1) the view on the nation-state; 2) the view on capitalism; 3) the view on civil society; 4) the view on political order; 5) the view on knowledge; 6) the view on human-nature relations. By doing an empirical textual analysis of academic texts on resilience theory I show that resilience theory assigns a limited role for the nation-state and a very important role for civil society and local actors when it comes to environmental politics. Its view on local actors and civil society is closely related to its relativist view on knowledge. Resilience theory views capitalism as a root of many environmental problems but with some political control and with changing perspectives this can be altered. Furthermore, resilience theory seems to advocate a weak bottom-up perspective on political order. Finally, resilience theory views human-nature relations as relations characterized by human adaptation to the prerequisites of nature. In conclusion, I argue that the empirical analysis show that resilience theory, as an environmental discourse, to a great extent resembles a subdivision of civic environmentalism called participatory multilateralism.
Robin, Melanie J. "Democratic pursuit of environmental justice through activism: Rural landowners, civil disobedience, and the perception of influence." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/28229.
Full textJalbert, Kirk. "Promising Data for Public Empowerment| The Making of Data Culture and Water Monitoring Infrastructures in the Marcellus Shale Gas Rush." Thesis, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3727054.
Full textA recent wave of advanced technologies for collecting and interpreting data offer new opportunities for laypeople to contribute to environmental monitoring science. This dissertation examines the conditions in which building knowledge infrastructures and embracing data “cultures” empowers and disempowers communities to challenge polluting industries. The processes and technologies of data cultures give people new capacities to understand their world, and to formulate powerful scientific arguments. However, data cultures also make many aspects of social life invisible, and elevate quantitative objective analysis over situated, subjective observation. This study finds that data cultures can empower communities when concerned citizens are equal contributors to research partnerships; ones that enable them to advocate for more nuanced data cultures permitting of structural critiques of status-quo environmental governance.
These arguments are developed through an ethnographic study of participatory watershed monitoring projects that seek to document the impacts of shale gas extraction in Pennsylvania, New York, and West Virginia. Energy companies are drilling for natural gas using highly controversial methods of extraction known as hydraulic fracturing. Growing evidence suggests that nearby watersheds can be impacted by a myriad of extraction related problems including seepage from damaged gas well casing, improper waste disposal, trucking accidents, and the underground migration of hydraulic fracking fluids. In response to these risks, numerous organizations are coordinating and carrying out participatory water monitoring efforts.
All of these projects embrace data culture in different ways. Each monitoring project has furthermore constructed its own unique infrastructure to support the sharing, aggregation, and analysis of environmental data. Differences in data culture investments and infrastructure building make some projects more effective than others in empowering affected communities. Four key aspects of these infrastructures are consequential to data culture formations and affordances: 1) the development of standardized monitoring protocols, 2) the politics of data collection technologies, 3) the frictions of database management systems, and 4) the power dynamics of organizational partnerships that come together around water monitoring efforts. Lessons from this analysis should inform future efforts to build infrastructures that address problems of environmental pollution in ways that also generate long-term capacity for empowering at-risk communities.
Bradford, Andrew Ryan. "An Examination of the Prison Environment: An Analysis of Inmate Concerns across Eight Environmental Dimensions." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2006. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2216.
Full textAlwash, Rafi Hammoud. "Child home accidents in a London borough : a study of their frequency in ethnic groups and the environmental associations." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1987. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.339370.
Full textClarke, Jason A. Onufer Tracy L. "Understanding environmental factors that affect violence in Salinas, California." Monterey, California : Naval Postgraduate School, 2009. http://edocs.nps.edu/npspubs/scholarly/theses/2009/Dec/09Dec%5FClarke_Onufer.pdf.
Full textThesis Advisor(s): Freeman, Michael. Second Reader: Rothstein, Hy. "December 2009." Description based on title screen as viewed on January 26, 2010. Author(s) subject terms: Salinas, violence, gangs, education, unemployment rate, economy, population, housing, police force, prison, rivalry, social service, community involvement, prevention, intervention. Includes bibliographical references (p. 81-87). Also available in print.
Hüller, Chris Regina. "A eficácia social do direito ambiental no meio rural agrícola: uma análise a partir da lei 9.605/98." Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná, 2012. http://repositorio.utfpr.edu.br/jspui/handle/1/427.
Full textRecently, the environmental issues has been growing as a matter of interest to society, This issues hits the right causing the number of laws on the subject to grown significantly in recent years. Nevertheless, within this universe are frequent juridical notes in the sense that the social effectiveness of these laws does not occur with the same intensity and enthusiasm with which they are promulgated. From an interdisciplinary proposal that seeks contributions of linguistics and sociology, this paper presents an approach to social issues regarding the effectiveness of environmental legislation in the rural environment considering a group of farmers penalized by the courts for violation of the provisions of Special Courts competence of Law 9.605/98 which deal with the flora. It initially made a theoretical approach under the theme of environmental sociology and Right seeking to understand and present the current status of discussions involving environmental legislation in the country. Following, based on Discourse Analysis, it is conducted an incursion by the legislative process that culminated in the promulgation of the Law 9.605/98, with emphasis on conflicting interests represented by the advocates of agribusiness and environmentalists in Congress. Afterwards, based on practical cases of application of the articles of Law 9.605/98 by the fiscalization and Justice aimed to know offenders penalized through a field survey, in order to characterize the farms, farming systems and production systems of existing farms. The data obtained were compared to those obtained in a similar group of farmers, environmentally adequated in order to produce inferences about the searched theme. Then, the same instrument applied to violators was applied to a group of similar farmers, but environmentally suitable in order to produce inferences about the search topic. The results obtained in this work demonstrated the model of development adopted in relation to agriculture is crucial to how the farmers understand environmental legislation. The research aimed to contribute to the debate about the effectiveness of environmental legislation in rural environment.
Verbeke, Monae. "The case of close encounters with London Zoo's penguins : a sociocultural analysis of the construction of environmental perspectives." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2015. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/81782/.
Full textEhrhardt-Martinez, Karen. "The diversity of our impact : the significance of development, inequality, and intervention in a cross-national assessment of the social causes of environmental degradation /." The Ohio State University, 2002. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1486461246816956.
Full textHardin, Gerald L. "Environmental Determinism: Broken Paradigm or Viable Perspective?" Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2009. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/1839.
Full textArnett, Megan. "The Heart of the Matter| A Candid Conversation about Campus Sustainability." Thesis, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10608356.
Full textThis study examines reasons for participation and barriers or obstacles to participation in sustainability-based organizations at a mid-size publicly-funded state university in the Mid-West. Based on participant observations and qualitative interviews with students, faculty, staff, and administration, this project examines the intra- and interpersonal factors associated with identity formation related to participation: alternative forms of educational pedagogy in relation to sustainability or environmental curriculum: collective action and resource mobilization as a means of increasing student awareness and participation in sustainability-based initiatives and activities on campus and among the greater community surrounding the campus: and finally, the specific dialogue in which sustainability is discussed and the ways in which this impacts the overall perception of sustainability as a concept and a movement. Due to the lack of participation among students in sustainability-based organizations and initiatives, this study explores barriers to participation and possible alternatives for increased engagement within diverse areas of the students experience to enhance this area of personal and educational development.
Zacks, Michelle Honora. "From table to trash| The rise and fall of mullet fishing in southerwest Florida." Thesis, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3585979.
Full textThis dissertation explores the social history and cultural meanings associated with mullet (Mugil cephalus), a common inshore fish, in southwest Florida from the early nineteenth century to the late twentieth century. Centuries of harvesting, trading, and eating mullet allowed diverse populations of people to adapt to a challenging environment, generating a commonweal that connected common folk—harvesters and consumers—to the state’s inshore waters. Systems of production and social relations based on the low-cost fish contributed to place-based notions of identity and collective allegiance to inshore waterways dedicated to provision rather than proceeds. As Americanization of the region progressed, conflicts widened between environmentally situated modes of life in the region and imperial abstractions of the terrain designed to render its inhabitants—human and otherwise—into resources capable of fueling capitalist growth. During the twentieth century, mullet widely came to be considered a “trash” fish, of little value as a food and expendable as a commodity. This downward shift in social status corresponded with the rising economic and political stature of Florida’s seascapes as sites of leisure production. Promoted through conservation rhetoric, a successful 1994 citizens’ ballot initiative banned statewide use of gill nets, the primary mullet-harvesting gear, a move that confirmed the success of instrumentalist logic that correlated social worth with capitalist potential.
Analysis of the history and symbolic significance of mullet production and consumption provides insight into the power relations that shape the ecological, economic, and political structure of waterways as social domains. This dissertation argues that the classification of mullet and the people associated with it as species of American “trash” grew out of longstanding efforts by federal and state officials to integrate Florida into the cultural boundaries of the nation, which eventually placed an accessible, food-producing seascape outside the rubric of the public good. Mullet-dependent people's defense of the species as a commodity, alongside their opposition to the commoditization of the seascape as a playground, offers valuable critiques of the social injustices and class bias that infuse contemporary rhetoric and practices regarding sustainability and conservation.
Kizewski, Amber Lynn. ""It's My Soul's Responsibilty"| Understanding activists' gendered experiences in anti-fracking grassroots organizations in Northern Colorado." Thesis, Colorado State University, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1606569.
Full textPrevious research highlights the relationship between gender and activism in various environmental justice (EJ) grassroots oriented contexts, including but not limited to: the coalfields of Central Appalachia, Three Mile Island, and the Pittston Coal Strike movement. However, little research examining the relationship between gender and activist’s efforts in relation to hydraulic fracturing exists, primarily because this movement itself is relatively new. From 2012-2014, four communities and one county collectively organized in an effort to ban or enact a moratorium on the practice of hydraulic fracturing, commonly referred to as fracking. Anti-fracking activists in Northern Colorado deem this technological advancement as poorly controlled and dangerous to public health and the environment. On the other hand, pro-fracking activists argue that this process is highly engineered, adequately controlled, and necessary to boost and sustain local oil and gas development in Colorado and the United States. Historically, grassroots environmental justice organizations are often created and lead by poor and minority communities as these communities experience the brunt of problematic industry practices. The setting of Northern Colorado is unique in this sense because the communities trying to halt oil and gas development are opposite of what one might expect, as they are predominately white, middle class, and educated. Thus, my study fills current gaps that exist in the literature and adopts an intersectional approach to address the subsequent research question broadly: how do gender, race, and class intersect and impact the nature and extent of activist’s efforts in Northern Colorado’s Hydraulic Fracturing movement? Ultimately, I find that gendered and raced identities, such as “mother” or “steward to the earth” play an imperative role in explaining women’s entry into the fracking movement, while men pull on a spectrum of identities. Furthermore, I find that traditional gendered divisions of labor help to elucidate the differing rates of participation among men and women in the movement, as well as the roles that activists fulfill in grassroots anti-fracking organizations. Ultimately, I argue that exploring gender, in conjunction with race and class on various analytical levels, contributes to a broader understanding of the nuances of activism in environmental justice movements.
Peterson, Christina A. "Wilderness State Park volunteers| A qualitative case study of meaning and sustainability." Thesis, San Jose State University, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10169616.
Full textIn an increasingly urbanized world, parks, open space and wilderness areas are vitally important to human well-being. California State Parks provide people with the ability to connect with nature and engage in outdoor recreation. Moreover, these parks protect natural and cultural resources and preserve biodiversity. California State Parks are underfunded and rely on volunteers to support essential park services. The Wilderness State Park Uniformed Volunteer Program provides essential recreation, resource protection, and biodiversity services. In order to determine the elements of the volunteering experience that contribute to a strong sense of volunteer identity and meaning, a qualitative case study was conducted using semi-structured interviews and grounded theory analysis. Results show that three themes emerge as providing a strong sense of meaning for volunteers: connecting with nature, working together, and helping others. Volunteers in this study demonstrated that they construct deep meaning around their volunteer experiences and foster an environmental stewardship identity within a framework of shared values, significance, goal-orientation, and belonging. This study has implications for volunteer satisfaction and retention as well as for overall sustainability of the parks’ mission.