
Environment and Society
Description
The second edition of Environment and Society: Concepts for a Just Transformation delivers a major, timely update to one of the field's most respected concept-driven environmental social science texts. Fully revised and significantly re-oriented to highlight concepts informing social projects in just transformation, this edition reshapes the book around an enhanced set of contemporary concepts-adding new chapters, removing outdated material, and thoroughly updating those retained-to reflect the dramatic shifts in how scholars, policymakers, and communities understand society-environment relations. With contributions from an even more globally diverse group of authors, the book now brings stronger representation from the Global South and a wider array of disciplinary perspectives.
The book examines whether today's dominant ideas and conceptual frameworks meaningfully support a "Just Transformation" in the face of deepening environmental and climatological crises. Across eleven concept-focused chapters-ranging from justice, colonialism, and intersectionality to futures, metabolism, collective action, commons, footprints, and more-contributors offer accessible syntheses, illustrative examples, and end-of-chapter discussion topics designed for classroom use.
This edition is designed for advanced undergraduate and graduate students across environmental studies, environmental sociology, geography, sustainability, and allied social sciences, as well as scholars seeking a clear, comparative resource on conceptual trends. It will also appeal to practitioners, NGO staff, and policy professionals who require a deeper understanding of the conceptual tools shaping environmental thinking today.
More details
Persons
Magnus Boström is Professor of Sociology within the School of Humanities, Education, and Social Sciences at Örebro University, Sweden.
Debra J. Davidson is Professor of Environmental Sociology within the Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta, Canada.
Pedro Roberto Jacobi is Senior Professor in the Institute of Energy and Environment at the University of São Paulo, Brazil.
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Climate Justice.- Chapter 3: Inequality.- Chapter 4: Intersectionality.- Chapter 5: Catastrophe.- Chapter 6: Metabolism.- Chapter 7: Demand.- Chapter 8: Commons.- Chapter 9: Colonialism.- Chapter 10: Knowledge.- Chapter 11: Conclusions.