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Sociology for sustainability science

Stefano B. Longo, Ellinor Isgren, Brett Clark, Andrew K. Jorgenson, Anne Jerneck, Lennart Olsson, Orla Kelly, David Harnesk, Richard York

2021Discover Sustainability34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Sociological insights are often underutilized in sustainability science. To further strengthen its commitment to interdisciplinary problem-driven, solutions-oriented research, sustainability science can better incorporate fundamental sociological conceptions into its core. We highlight four aspects of sociological thought that we consider crucial for advancing sustainability science research: (1) social construction and critical realism, (2) structure and agency, (3) historical specificity, and (4) collective action. We draw on examples from sociology to support a dynamic understanding of how social relations interact with the bio-geo-physical world. This necessary integration of sociological insights, we argue, is critical to generate comprehensive assessments of the causes and consequences of human-induced environmental change, and tend to be overlooked or oversimplified within the field of sustainability science. Beyond that, it can stimulate the development and implementation of viable solutions to sustainability challenges.

Topics & Concepts

SustainabilitySociologySustainability scienceAgency (philosophy)Environmental sociologySociological theoryField (mathematics)Structure and agencySocial sustainabilityAction (physics)EpistemologyEngineering ethicsCritical realism (philosophy of perception)Social scienceManagement scienceEnvironmental ethicsRealismEcologyEconomicsEngineeringPure mathematicsQuantum mechanicsPhilosophyPhysicsBiologyMathematicsSustainability and Climate Change GovernanceClimate Change Communication and PerceptionComplex Systems and Decision Making
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