Understanding Environmental Governance
- 1 December 2004
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organization & Environment
- Vol. 17 (4) , 471-492
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1086026603259086
Abstract
This article presents an historical sketch of the insights and applications provided by social science scholars on environmental governance. The authors begin with a review of the conceptual developments during the past 50 years characterized in terms of six conceptual perspectives: pluralism, agency capture, ecological Marxism, ecological modernization, social constructionism, and global environmentalism. This section is followed by an empirical analysis of academic journal coverage of research on environmental governance from 1963 to 2001 listed in the database Sociological Abstracts. The authors conclude that an understanding of the potential for environmental improvement could be advanced by the treatment of works that fall within the conceptual typology described herein, as a cumulative body of interdisciplinary knowledge. Advancements in this area could, furthermore, be facilitated through a broadening of empirical and methodological treatment of environmental governance and a greater attention to macro-structural relations among state and societal forces and environmental phenomena.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Forests, Floods, and the Environmental State in ChinaOrganization & Environment, 2002
- Government and Environmental Innovation in Europe and North AmericaAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 2002
- Globalization and the Transformation of Environmental GovernanceAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 2002
- Corporate Interest and Trade LiberalizationOrganization & Environment, 2000
- Ecological modernisation and institutional reflexivity: Environmental reform in the late modern ageEnvironmental Politics, 1996
- Sociology, environment, and modernity: Ecological modernization as a theory of social changeSociety & Natural Resources, 1992
- Environmental sociology and global environmental change: A critical assessmentSociety & Natural Resources, 1992
- Capitalism, nature, socialism a theoretical introduction∗Capitalism Nature Socialism, 1988
- Authority and Responsibility for Environmental AdministrationThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1970
- Power and AdministrationPublic Administration Review, 1949