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Raynolds, Laura T. – Rural Sociology, 2012
This article analyzes the organization of the fair trade flower industry, integration of Ecuadorian enterprises into these networks, and power of certification to address key environmental and social concerns on participating estates. Pursuing a social regulatory approach, I locate fair trade within the field of new institutions that establish and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Floriculture, Business, International Trade
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De Master, Kathryn – Rural Sociology, 2012
Analysts have heralded the principle of "multifunctionality" undergirding the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy "Second Pillar" support mechanisms as a "new...and strong paradigm" for agriculture (van der Ploeg and Roep 2003), with the potential to re-embed social, environmental, and ethical concerns into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Agriculture, Ethics, Environmental Standards
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Brulle, Robert J.; Benford, Robert D. – Rural Sociology, 2012
One enduring question in social movements research is the relationship between cultural representations and organizational structure. In this article, we examine the development of different discursive frames over time, and how such frame shifts affect movement structure and practices. This approach seeks to illuminate the dialectical interplay…
Descriptors: Wildlife, Group Behavior, Social Change, History
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Bell, Shannon Elizabeth; York, Richard – Rural Sociology, 2010
Economic changes and the machinations of the treadmill of production have dramatically reduced the number of jobs provided by extractive industries, such as mining and timber, in the United States and other affluent nations in the post-World War II era. As the importance of these industries to national, regional, and local economies wanes,…
Descriptors: Fuels, Ideology, Content Analysis, Industrialization
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Clement, Matthew Thomas – Rural Sociology, 2009
Environmental social scientists debate whether or not modern development reduces society's impact on the biosphere. The empirical research informing the discussion has not yet adequately examined the social determinants of municipal solid-waste (MSW) generation, an increasingly relevant issue, both ecologically and sociologically. A primary…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Counties, Environmental Standards, Sanitation
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Stedman, Richard; Lee, Brian; Brasier, Kathryn; Weigle, Jason L.; Higdon, Francis – Rural Sociology, 2009
Recent initiatives from state and federal government agencies have helped foster the formation of community-based watershed organizations. Although there is a great deal of enthusiasm about the potential of these organizations to enhance water quality, relatively little attention has been paid to the impacts these organizations may have on the…
Descriptors: Water Quality, Environmental Education, Sequential Approach, Mail Surveys
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Hamilton, Lawrence C.; Colocousis, Chris R.; Duncan, Cynthia M. – Rural Sociology, 2010
How people respond to questions involving the environment depends partly on individual characteristics. Characteristics such as age, gender, education, and ideology constitute the well-studied "social bases of environmental concern," which have been explained in terms of cohort effects or of cognitive and cultural factors related to social…
Descriptors: Unemployment, Individual Characteristics, Conservation (Environment), Audience Awareness
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Salka, William M. – Rural Sociology, 2003
There is considerable debate in the literature regarding the variables that produce differing levels of countywide support for environmental protection. Competing explanations include differences stemming from individual attributes of residents, economic conditions, and urban-rural differences. The present study examines why some counties express…
Descriptors: Voting, Behavior, Environmental Standards, Social Indicators
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Thomas, John K.; And Others – Rural Sociology, 1990
Describes integrated pest management (IPM), a more advanced approach than chemical pesticide. Applies diffusion and farming-systems theories to create analytical model to explain IPM's adoption, use, and implications for agricultural change. Telephone surveys of Texas cotton growers on IPM practices found different sources of IPM information…
Descriptors: Adult Farmer Education, Agricultural Skills, Agricultural Trends, Diffusion (Communication)
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Lowe, George D.; Pinhey, Thomas K. – Rural Sociology, 1982
Rural people consistently support environmental protection less than urban people. Four hypotheses tested reasons for this using 1973-1978 General Social Survey data. Socialization in metropolitan areas which leads to favorable consideration of social solutions to environmental problems received the most support, but nothing explained much of the…
Descriptors: Community Development, Community Size, Environmental Standards, Longitudinal Studies
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Freudenburg, William R. – Rural Sociology, 2006
Rather than seeking ivory-tower isolation, members of the Rural Sociological Society have always been distinguished by a willingness to work with specialists from a broad range of disciplines, and to work on some of the world's most challenging problems. What is less commonly recognized is that the willingness to reach beyond disciplinary…
Descriptors: World Problems, Rural Sociology, Interdisciplinary Approach, Social Environment
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Shriver, Thomas E.; Kennedy, Dennis K. – Rural Sociology, 2005
The majority of the literature on contaminated communities indicates that environmental hazards lead to conflict and dissension. In this paper we examine the salient dimensions of conflict and factionalism in a rural Oklahoma community. The community is heavily contaminated from 80 years of commercial mining operations and was one of the first…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Physical Environment, Hazardous Materials, Conflict