Globalization and the Environment

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2009-09-01
Publisher(s): Haymarket Books
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Summary

What is missing in the mounting literature on globalization is a focused theoretical foundation with parallel empirical examinations of global structures and their environmental consequences. The articles in this volume examine how the world-economy and related non-economic forms of global structuring impact the natural environment and the living conditions of human populations living across the globe. Environmental dynamics in areas as diverse as Ancient Egypt and the Modern Amazon are presented for readers who are new to the world-systems approach and for others interested in recent efforts to link environmental outcomes and antecedents to global processes. About the Author Andrew K. Jorgenson is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Utah. His research on the environmental and human well being impacts of world economic and world society integration appear in numerous journals including Social Forces, Social Problems, and International Sociology. He is current co-editor of the Journal of World-Systems Research. Edward L. Kick is Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at North Carolina State University. He has published articles on world-system structures and change in the modern era, as well as various papers that link world-system structure to national attributes such as economic development and the structure of organizations.

Author Biography

Andrew K. Jorgenson is an assistant professor in the department of Sociology at the University of Utah. His research on the environmental and human well-being impacts of world economic and world society integration appear in numerous journals including Social Forces, Social Problems, and International Sociology. He is currently a co-editor of the Journal of World-Systems Research. Edward L. Kick is a professor in the department of Sociology and Anthropology at North Carolina State University. He has published articles on world-system structures and change in the modern era, as well as various papers that link world-system structure to national attributes such as economic development and the structure of organizations.

Table of Contents

Globalization and the Environment: An Introductionp. 1
The Ecology and the Economy: What is Rational?p. 13
Cornucopia or Zero-Sum Game? The Epistemology of Sustainabilityp. 23
A Quantitative, Cross-National Study of Deforestation in the Late 20th Century: A Case of Recursive Exploitationp. 37
Foreign Investment Dependence and the Environment: A Global Perspectivep. 61
Social Roots of Global Environmental Change: A World-Systems Analysis of Carbon Dioxide Emissionsp. 79
Emissions of Sulfur Dioxide and Nitrogen Oxides in the Modern World-Systemp. 119
The Flow of Hazardous Exports in the World-System: The Case of the Maquiladora Centers of Northern Mexicop. 133
Large Dams as Development: Re-structuring Natural Resources in Lesothop. 151
The Shifting Nature(s) of "Development": Growth, Crisis, and Recovery in Indonesia's Forestsp. 173
Matter, Space, Energy and Political Economy: The Amazon in the World Systemp. 193
Integrating Resource Consumption into Macrosociological Analyses of Global Social Change and Environmental Degradationp. 213
Ecological Degradation and the Evolution of World-Systemsp. 231
Ecological Crisis Phases, Globalization, and World-System Evolutionp. 253
Referencesp. 291
About the Authorsp. 335
Indexp. 339
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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