How a society relates to nature is shaped by the dominant social paradigm (DSP): a society’scollective view on social, economic, political, and environmental issues. The characteristics of the DSP have important consequences for natural systems and their conservation. Based on a synthesis of academic literature, we provide a new gradient of 12 types of human-nature relationships synthesized from scientific literature, and an analysis of where the DSP of industrialized, and more specifically, neoliberal societies fit on that gradient. We aim to answer how the industrialized DSP relates to nature, i.e., what types of human-nature relationships this DSP incorporates, and what the consequences of these relationships are for nature conservation ...
In the “postmodern” context of an increasingly pluralistic social science, we are witnessing the rev...
Reversing ecological degradation is critical for survival of many species but will not occur without...
So long as sustainability represents the attempt to pacify the relationship between societies and th...
How a society relates to nature is shaped by the dominant social paradigm (DSP): a society’scollecti...
Mythology and available archeological evidence reveal that in primitive times, humankind lived in ha...
The rise of modern capitalism, which is based largely on Enlightenment thinking and the primacy of e...
This chapter reviews a rapidly expanding body of research in political ecology exploring processes b...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
This paper will cover a practical application of systems science by using a natural systems perspec...
The dominant manners in which environmental issues have been framed by sociology are deeply problema...
There are four logical possibilities for conceiving the relationship of nature and society: the redu...
The importance and the methodologies of environmental management, and its relationship to human deve...
The global environmental outlook is increasingly bleak and the human condition does not fare better....
Sustainable development is rooted in the history of two divergent movements – for the pres...
In the “postmodern” context of an increasingly pluralistic social science, we are witnessing the rev...
Reversing ecological degradation is critical for survival of many species but will not occur without...
So long as sustainability represents the attempt to pacify the relationship between societies and th...
How a society relates to nature is shaped by the dominant social paradigm (DSP): a society’scollecti...
Mythology and available archeological evidence reveal that in primitive times, humankind lived in ha...
The rise of modern capitalism, which is based largely on Enlightenment thinking and the primacy of e...
This chapter reviews a rapidly expanding body of research in political ecology exploring processes b...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
This paper will cover a practical application of systems science by using a natural systems perspec...
The dominant manners in which environmental issues have been framed by sociology are deeply problema...
There are four logical possibilities for conceiving the relationship of nature and society: the redu...
The importance and the methodologies of environmental management, and its relationship to human deve...
The global environmental outlook is increasingly bleak and the human condition does not fare better....
Sustainable development is rooted in the history of two divergent movements – for the pres...
In the “postmodern” context of an increasingly pluralistic social science, we are witnessing the rev...
Reversing ecological degradation is critical for survival of many species but will not occur without...
So long as sustainability represents the attempt to pacify the relationship between societies and th...