Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects

Environmentally beneficial actions come in diverse forms and occur in a wide range of settings ranging from personal decisions in households to negotiated agreements between nations. This article draws upon both social and ecological theory to outline, theoretically, the circumstances in which loca...

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Main Author: Thomas K. Rudel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2011-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art19/
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spelling doaj-c62d8e734fc246cca8a43358bb0ec43d2020-11-24T23:24:24ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872011-06-011621910.5751/ES-04052-1602194052Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global EffectsThomas K. Rudel0Department of Human Ecology, Rutgers UniversityEnvironmentally beneficial actions come in diverse forms and occur in a wide range of settings ranging from personal decisions in households to negotiated agreements between nations. This article draws upon both social and ecological theory to outline, theoretically, the circumstances in which localized actions, undertaken by citizens, should cumulate to have global effects. The beliefs behind these actions tend to be either 'defensive environmentalism' in which actors work to improve their personal, local environments or 'altruistic environmentalism' in which actors work to improve the global environment. Defensive environmental actions such as creating common property institutions, limiting fertility, reducing waste streams, using energy efficient technologies, and eating organic foods have cumulative effects whereas altruistic environmental action often occurs through threshold crossings following a focusing event. Defensive environmentalism expedites altruistic environmentalism by persuading politicians, after focusing events, that rank and file citizens really do want a regime change. The resulting political transformation should, at least theoretically, create a sustainable development state that would promote additional defensive and altruistic environmental actions.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art19/altruistic environmentalismdefensive environmentalismfocusing eventslocal-global interactions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas K. Rudel
spellingShingle Thomas K. Rudel
Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
Ecology and Society
altruistic environmentalism
defensive environmentalism
focusing events
local-global interactions
author_facet Thomas K. Rudel
author_sort Thomas K. Rudel
title Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
title_short Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
title_full Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
title_fullStr Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
title_full_unstemmed Local Actions, Global Effects? Understanding the Circumstances in which Locally Beneficial Environmental Actions Cumulate to Have Global Effects
title_sort local actions, global effects? understanding the circumstances in which locally beneficial environmental actions cumulate to have global effects
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Environmentally beneficial actions come in diverse forms and occur in a wide range of settings ranging from personal decisions in households to negotiated agreements between nations. This article draws upon both social and ecological theory to outline, theoretically, the circumstances in which localized actions, undertaken by citizens, should cumulate to have global effects. The beliefs behind these actions tend to be either 'defensive environmentalism' in which actors work to improve their personal, local environments or 'altruistic environmentalism' in which actors work to improve the global environment. Defensive environmental actions such as creating common property institutions, limiting fertility, reducing waste streams, using energy efficient technologies, and eating organic foods have cumulative effects whereas altruistic environmental action often occurs through threshold crossings following a focusing event. Defensive environmentalism expedites altruistic environmentalism by persuading politicians, after focusing events, that rank and file citizens really do want a regime change. The resulting political transformation should, at least theoretically, create a sustainable development state that would promote additional defensive and altruistic environmental actions.
topic altruistic environmentalism
defensive environmentalism
focusing events
local-global interactions
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art19/
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaskrudel localactionsglobaleffectsunderstandingthecircumstancesinwhichlocallybeneficialenvironmentalactionscumulatetohaveglobaleffects
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