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Societies consuming nature: A panel study of the ecological footprints of nations, 1960-2003
Authors:Andrew K. Jorgenson  Brett Clark
Affiliation:a Department of Sociology, University of Utah, 380 South 1530 East, Room 301, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, United States
b Department of Sociology and Anthropology, North Carolina State University, NC, United States
Abstract:Sociology is poised to greatly enhance our collective understanding of the various sustainability challenges facing the world today. To contribute to this endeavor, the authors conduct panel analyses of the per capita ecological footprints of nations to evaluate multiple theoretical traditions within environmental sociology and its sister approaches. Findings indicate that the consumption-based environmental impacts of nations are tied to economic development, urban population, militarization, and the structure of international trade. Ecological conditions in the context of climate and biogeography also prove to partially shape the environmental harms of human activities. Ultimately, this research suggests that political-economic factors, ecological milieu, and structural associations between nations all influence society/nature relationships. Considering the globally unsustainable levels of resource consumption and concomitant increases in pollution for a growing number of nations throughout the world, the authors contend that theoretically inclusive and methodologically rigorous investigations on such topics should be more central to the discipline.
Keywords:Sustainability   Globalization   Development   Environment   Political economy   Human ecology   Ecological footprint   Consumption   Ecologically unequal exchange   Militarization   Urbanization   Environmental sociology
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