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Designed to introduce students to key concepts and methods in
sociology and to engage them in critical thinking, Ten Lessons in
Introductory Sociology provides a brief and valuable overview to
four major questions that guide the discipline: * Why sociology? *
What unites us? * What divides us? * How do societies change?
Deftly balancing breadth and depth, the book makes the study of
sociology accessible, relevant, and meaningful. Contextualizing the
most important issues, Ten Lessons helps students discover "the
sociological imagination" and what it means to be part of an
engaged public discourse.
Globalization and Resistance brings together cutting edge theory
and research about how global economics and politics alter the way
ordinary people engage in contentious political action. The cases
range from nineteenth-century Irish immigrant networks, to protests
against World Bank projects in the Amazon, to contemporary
transnational organizing for the environment, to the 'battle of
Seattle.' The volume illuminates the different ways that
globalization processes affect social movements, and vice versa.
An account of the movement for sustainable development in Ecuador
through four eras: movement origins, neoliberal boom, neoliberal
bust, and citizens' revolution. Ecuador is biologically diverse,
petroleum rich, and economically poor. Its extraordinary
biodiversity has attracted attention and funding from such
transnational environmental organizations as Conservation
International, the World Wildlife Fund, and the United States
Agency for International Development. In Ecuador itself there are
more than 200 environmental groups dedicated to sustainable
development, and the country's 2008 constitution grants
constitutional rights to nature. The current leftist government is
committed both to lifting its people out of poverty and pursuing
sustainable development, but petroleum extraction is Ecuador's
leading source of revenue. While extraction generates economic
growth, which supports the state's social welfare agenda, it also
causes environmental destruction. Given these competing concerns,
will Ecuador be able to achieve sustainability? In this book, Tammy
Lewis examines the movement for sustainable development in Ecuador
through four eras: movement origins (1978 to 1987), neoliberal boom
(1987 to 2000), neoliberal bust (2000 to 2006), and citizens'
revolution (2006 to 2015). Lewis presents a typology of Ecuador's
environmental organizations: ecoimperialists, transnational
environmentalists from other countries; ecodependents, national
groups that partner with transnational groups; and ecoresisters,
home-grown environmentalists who reject the dominant development
paradigm. She examines the interplay of transnational funding, the
Ecuadorian environmental movement, and the state's environmental
and development policies. Along the way, addressing literatures in
environmental sociology, social movements, and development studies,
she explores what configuration of forces-political, economic, and
environmental-is most likely to lead to a sustainable balance
between the social system and the ecosystem.
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