Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
Among those probleÂmatiques we find, in particular, the search for certain know-
ledge and truth, the building of a viable and good political order, the issue of the continuity of the acting person, and ways of relating in the lived present to time past and time future. Without some assumption of human autonomy ± i.e. the
human ability to give ourselves our own laws ± these questions would not arise.
That is why they are fundamentally modern. But this assumption cannot be
taken for granted, and it does not lead toward solutions. That is why the
sociology of ``modern society'' unduly limits the variety of possibilities of conceiving these probleÂmatiques.
These probleÂmatiques co-emerge with modernity, and they can neither be
rejected nor be handled once and for all by finding their ``modern'' solution.
Societies that accept the double imaginary signification of modernity are des-
tined to search for answers to these questions and to institute those answers.
Temporarily stable solutions can thus indeed be found. But those solutions can
always again be challenged, and then new ways of dealing with those probleÂma-
tiques have to be elaborated. Hobsbawm's ``most dramatic'' transformation was
± and still is ± such a transformative crisis of modernity. What the sociology of the contemporary world needs to take from this experience is that the constitutive probleÂmatiques of modernity will tend to re-emerge and they will always
have to be interpreted in their concrete temporality, at their specific historical location.
4
Emerging Trends in Environmental
Sociology
Frederick H. Buttel and August Gijswijt
The subdiscipline of environmental sociology has now has been in existence for a little over a quarter century. Beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
sociologists in a number of (mostly Western) countries began to recognize the
importance of environmental issues, and initiated research relating to the natural environment. By the late 1980s, dozens of universities across the world were
offering courses in environmental sociology, and many of these universities had
designed undergraduate or graduate curricula in environmental sociology. In a
number of countries environmental sociologists formed voluntary associations,
typically within larger sociological associations. For example, in 1975 the Sec-
tion on Environment (later renamed the Section on Environment and Techno-
logy) was formed within the American Sociological Association. In 1990 a group
of 35 environmental sociologists formed a Working Group on Environmental
Sociology at the International Sociological Association (ISA) World Congress in
Madrid, and in 1994 it obtained official status as the Environment and Society
Research Committee (RC 24). At each ISA World Congress since Madrid there
has been continued expansion of RC 24 activities in terms of the number of
participants, papers, and post-congress publications.
Despite this impressive expansion of environmental sociology, the subdisci-
pline has yet to achieve a prominent position in the larger sociological discipline.
Nor does it have an influential position in national and international policy-
making circles as do the physical and biological sciences at the Intergovernmen-
tal Panel on Climate Change (IPPC). This lack of centrality suggests the need to look historically at the emergence and institutionalization of environmental
sociology and to do so critically.
In this chapter we survey some of the most important developments in
environmental sociology since its establishment about a quarter century ago.
In so doing we adopt a historical approach, and stress major trends in the
44
Frederick H. Buttel and August Gijswijt
subdiscipline since its founding in the early to mid-1970s. We place particular
emphasis on the major debates in the field and how these controversies have
shaped and contributed to its development.
The Establishment of the Materialist
Materialist Core of
Environmental Sociology
To a very considerable extent the course that environmental sociology took over
its first quarter century was shaped by several interrelated convictions that were strongly held by the most influential founders. The first conviction was, of
course, a tendency for environmental sociologists to have strong pro-environ-
mental predilections, and to feel that sociology ought to be made relevant to
achieving environmental goals. Second, it was held that conventional or main-
stream sociology was seriously flawed because the discipline of sociology had
ignored the role of the biophysical environment. The third strongly held convic-
tion was that the inability of the discipline of sociology to address environmental issues was rooted in the classical tradition, which promulgated thè`social facts''
injunction, and which assumed that indefinite social, technical, and material
progress was inevitable. (By ``social facts'' we refer to the general posture that sociological analysis must stress social explanations of social phenomena.) The
fourth conviction was that environmental sociology ought to aspire for nothing
less than to strive to reorient the larger discipline of sociology so that it could better understand the rooting of human actors and societies within their biophysical contexts.
Perhaps the most critical concomitant of these four convictions of the 1970s
foundation generation of environmental sociologists was that the key problem-
atic of environmental sociology was why there tended to be very strong, if not
intrinsic, tendencies to serious environmental destruction within modern societ-
ies. Not only would persuasive theorization of environmental destruction help to launch the field as a distinctive area of inquiry, but such a theoretical emphasis was thought to be effective in pointing out that mainstream sociology was
obsolete because of its failure to recognize the strong tendencies toward cata-
clysmic environmental changes. Thus, much of the formative literature consisted
of explanations as to why contemporary societies tended to be locked into
environmentally destructive tendencies. Riley Dunlap (1993) and William R.
Catton Jr (1976), for example, posited that the four-plus centuries of abundance made possible by Western expansion resulted in cultural assumptions about the
desirability of growth and the inevitability of progress. Catton posited in his
influential book Overshoot (Catton, 1980) that the combination of the resources
made available through the colonization by the West and the huge supplies of
fossil fuels caused modern societies to engage in growth and expansion that is
analogous to a species which no longer faces predation. In short, exuberant
growth will continue until sustenance runs out, precipitating ``crash'' and ``die-off.'' Similarly, Allan Schnaiberg and colleagues (Schnaiberg, 1975, 1980;
Schnaiberg and Gould, 1994) developed an influential notion of thè`treadmill
Emerging Trends in Environmental Sociology
45
of production,'' which has been employed to explain why economic growth
tends to be in the interest of state managers and agencies, as well as in the
interest of private capital, and how and why state interests in growth reinforce the interests of capital in expansion. James O'Connor (1994) developed a related but distinct neo-Marxist perspective on thè`second contradiction of capital.''
O'Connor has posited that in addition to there being a contradiction between
capital and labor (the first contradiction, as elaborated by Marx), the expansionism of capitalism tends to cause environmental problems and create a second
contradiction (which is manifested mainly as rising private costs of production).
Raymond Murphy (1994) developed a neo-Weberian analysis that locates the
causes of environmental problems in the increasing institutional sway of formal
and instrumental rationality and the increased tendency for private accumula-
tion to become the accepted end of private and public decision-making.
These early theoretical developments in environmental sociology tended to be
couched in ambivalence toward or criticism of mainstream sociology. In addi-
tion, emphasis was typically placed on the claim that the inability of standard
sociology to recognize the importance of the natural world had to do with the
legacy of the classical tradition. The pioneering environmental sociologists felt that the nineteenth-century classical sociological theorists, in their quest to
distinguish sociology from the rival disciplines of psychology, biology, econo-
mics, and geography, had shifted the pendulum of scholarship too far in the
direction of handcuffing sociology with thè`social facts'' injunction. Catton and Dunlap (1978), Dickens (1992), Benton and Redclift (1994), Martell (1994),
Murphy (1994), and many others insisted that nineteenth-century social thought
has had the effect of steering the discipline of sociology in the direction of
ignoring resources, nature, and the environment. Not only has there been
sharp criticism of the classical sociologists (especially Marx, Durkheim, and
Weber) within core environmental sociology, but Catton and Dunlap (1978)
argued that thè`human-exemptionalist'' character of twentieth-century soci-
ological thought presumes that social-organizational, cultural, and technological innovations exempt humans from the natural laws that govern other species.
Conversely, Catton and Dunlap have argued that environmental sociology
should strive for nothing less than to catalyze a fundamental reorientation of
the discipline of sociology. They have suggested that the very nature of environmental sociology is that it represents à`new paradigm'' (Catton and Dunlap,
1978), while the apparent divisions within sociology ± for example, between
Marxism and functionalism ± are actually relatively minor variations on the
larger tendency of sociology to ignore the natural environment (see Foster,
1999a).
These and other influential pieces of scholarship during environmental soci-
ology's first two decades have very significant strengths and have been major
contributions. Each of these scholarly traditions has been theoretically ambi-
tious. Each has striven for a multi-institutional perspective that, for example, encompasses major literatures from such sociological specialty areas as political sociology, economic sociology, sociology of science, sociology of occupations
and work, demography, and urban sociology.
46
Frederick H. Buttel and August Gijswijt
At the same time, the core of environmental sociology exhibits some pro-
blems. First, the preoccupation with accounting for the causes of increasing
environmental degradation has tended to foreclose consideration of ongoing
social processes of responding to or providing solutions to environmental pro-
blems. As we will see below, the need for environmental sociology to be able to
theorize the processes of environmental improvement has resulted in some major
changes in the subdiscipline over the past five or so years.
A second issue is that these core or foundational works were written at a high
level of abstraction and have tended to lead to a theoretical literature that is meta-theoretical in nature. Put somewhat differently, it has proven difficult for these core environmental-sociological scholars to deduce testable hypotheses
from their work and apply them in a systematic, sustained research program.
Many of the pioneers in environmental sociology have found themselves doing
their empirical work at some distance from their theoretical views. For example, as is noted below, Dunlap's (1991) empirical work has tended to focus on public
environmental attitudes (particularly the degree to which à`new environmental
paradigm'' can be found in public environmental orientations). Likewise,
Schnaiberg's empirical work has focused on local environmental movements
(particularly anti-toxics and recycling movements), albeit with attention to
how the treadmill of production constrains movement strategies (Gould et al.,
1996). But in the main the tendency has been for controversies in the field to be dealt with on the grounds of theoretical debate rather than empirical evaluation and comparison. Thus, there has remained a fairly wide gulf between theory and
research, though the 1990s have arguably witnessed a number of major efforts to
narrow this gulf.
Third, each of the core theories in environmental sociology has tended to have
an overly general conception of what the environment is or how the environment
should be defined. These theories tend to presume that the environment is a
singular ``thing'' that is being degraded in essentially a cumulative fashion by extraction of materials from the earth and biosphere and by the creation of
pollution. That is, ``the environment'' ± even if it is acknowledged to be multidimensional and a highly complex system ± is nonetheless seen in some ultimate
sense as having some upper bound of long-term human-carrying capacity, and as
having an underlying `ùnity'' (Ophuls, 1977). Thus, mainstream environmental
sociology has not tended to recognize the different levels or scales of environ-
mental resources or environmental causality, nor has it been effective in recog-
nizing the importance of what Benton (1989) has called `ècoregulatory
practices'' (by which he means renewable resource extraction systems based on