
For the past two decades, scientists have urged us to abandon fossil fuels as rapidly as possible and pursue a range of other environmental reforms to avert the many crises climate change will bring. The reforms have not occurred at the expected rate, and their absence raises questions about when they might occur. In Shocks, States, and Sustainability, Thomas K. Rudel addresses this question. He outlines a theory of environmental revolutions and when they will likely occur through a comparison of radical environmental reforms throughout the 20th century. By looking at farmers in the American Dust Bowl, land-use planners in post-war England, small farmers in post-Soviet Cuba, and lobster fishers along the coast of Maine, Rudel emphasizes how sudden focusing events can spur radical reforms by providing a fresh realization about the scarcity of natural resources. Shocks, States, and Sustainability explains how earth-shaking events like droughts, depressions, and wars can provide the foundations necessary for the pursuit of global sustainability.
This book investigates the conditions under which radical environmental reforms are successfully implemented by analyzing the role of sudden, disruptive events in shifting political and social priorities. Thomas K. Rudel, a professor of human ecology and sociology, utilizes a comparative historical framework to examine how resource scarcity and external shocks force states and communities to adopt sustainable practices. He argues that major crises act as catalysts that overcome institutional inertia, allowing for policy shifts that would otherwise remain politically unfeasible.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in environmental sociology and political science recognize this work as a rigorous comparative analysis of how crises influence policy change. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is well-suited for students and researchers interested in the intersection of history and environmental governance.
Page Count:
228
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190924470
ISBN-13:
9780190924478
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