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This timely and important study by leading academics is a comparative study of the environmental movement's successes and failures in four very different states: the USA, UK, Germany and Norway. It covers the entire sweep of the modern environmental era beginning in 1970. The analysis also explains the role played by social movements in making modern societies more deeply democratic, and yields insights into the strategic choices of environmental movements as they decide on what terms to engage, enter, or resist the state.
Social movements take shape in relation to the kind of state they
face, while over time states are transformed by the movements that
they both incorporate and resist. Green States and Social Movements
is a comparative study of the environmental movement's successes
and failures in four very different states: the USA, UK, Germany
and Norway. The history covers the entire sweep of the modern
environmental era that begins in 1970. The end in view is a green
transformation of the state and society on a par with earlier
transformations that gave us first the liberal capitalist state and
then the welfare state. The authors explain why such a
transformation is now most likely in Germany, and why it is least
likely in the United States, which has lost the status of
environmental pioneer that it gained in the early 1970s. Their
comparative analysis also explains the role played by social
movements in making modern societies more deeply democratic, and
yields insights into the strategic choices of environmental
movements as they decide on what terms to engage, enter or resist
the state. Sometimes it makes sense for a movement to act
conventionally, as a green party or set of interest groups. But
sometimes inclusion can mean co-optation, in which case a movement
can instead emphasize action in and through civil society.
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