Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist PerspectiveTaylor & Francis US, 1995 - 236 pagina's John Hannigan argues that society's unwillingness to recognise and solve environmental problems rests primarily upon the claims making activities of a number of 'issue entrepreneurs' in science, mass media and politics. |
Inhoudsopgave
SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION | 55 |
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTRUCTIONISM | 57 |
NEWS MEDIA AND ENVIRONMENTAL | 63 |
SCIENCE AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL | 76 |
CONSTRUCTING ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS | 92 |
NATURE ECOLOGY | 109 |
FROM SCIENTIFIC | 128 |
THE SUCCESSFUL | 146 |
BIOTECHNOLOGY AS | 162 |
Conclusion | 187 |
201 | |
223 | |
230 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist Perspective John A. Hannigan Gedeeltelijke weergave - 1995 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acid rain action activists activities agenda Alpac American animal arena argued biodiversity biodiversity loss biological diversity biotechnology Britain campaign Canada Canadian Catton CEGB central Chapter concern conflict conservation biology construction of environmental contested coverage cultural damage debate depicted discourse Dunlap ecologists ecology economic ecosystem effects environment environmental claims environmental groups environmental issues environmental justice environmental movement environmental risks environmental sociology environmentalists epistemic community evidence example forest frames genetic global warming Greenpeace human industry institutions interest Journal journalists Kitsuse knowledge lakes linked major mass media mental moral nations notably nuclear organisations ozone depletion Park perspective pesticide plant political pollution postmodern Press production programme rainforest recent regulatory rhetoric role scientific scientists social construction social constructionism social constructionist social problems society sociologists sources species story sulphur dioxide theory Third World threat toxic United wilderness wildlife York