Thanks again, everyone, for the useful dialogue and citations. Below I’ve compiled the suggestions to the first general inquiry and to the more specific second inquiry about money in politics.
To J.P.’s question or surprise about this thread and perhaps echoing Stacy: I guess I hoped to find something like an institutional analysis of, say, the effects of Citizens United on the environment. I am less interested in showing my students how this or that corporation got its way at the expense of the environment and more interested in showing them how the rules of government influence the environment. Sounds like Leah might have some answers for us soon. In the meantime, the literature you’ve all suggested has a lot to offer and will keep me plenty busy, so thank you! RESPONSES TO INQUIRY ON ARTICLE ON HOW POLITICS WORKS TO INFLUENCE ENVIRONMENTAL OUTCOMES Neil Adger & Andrew Jordan's Governing Sustainability (Cambridge Univ Press 2009). Neil Carter's Politics of the Environment (2nd ed., Cambridge Univ Press 2007). Neil Carter's Politics of the Environment (2nd ed., Cambridge Univ Press 2007). Judy Layzer. The Environmental Case. Paul Steinberg’s Who Rules the Earth. https://www.amazon.com/Who-Rules-Earth-Social-Planet/dp/0190692219/ref=mt_pa perback?_encoding=UTF8 <https://www.amazon.com/Who-Rules-Earth-Social-Planet/dp/0190692219/ref=mt_p aperback?_encoding=UTF8&me> &me= plus animation online and/or a TED talk Leah Stokes, Noelle Selin and Larry Susskind. The Mercury Game : http://mercurygame.scripts.mit.edu/game/ - We also evaluated what the game does from a learning perspective here: https://link.springer.com/article/10. 1007/s13412-014-0183-y Vig and Kraft, Environmental Policy: New Directions for the 21st Century. RESPONSES TO MORE SPECIFIC INQUIRY ABOUT ROLE OF MONEY IN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS DECISIONMAKING AND OUTCOMES (CAMPAIGN FINANCE AND CORPORATE LOBBYING): Baka, Jenniver, Kate J. Neville, Erika Weinthal, and Karen Bakker. 2018. Agenda‐Setting at the Energy‐Water Nexus: Constructing and Maintaining a Policy Monopoly in U.S. Hydraulic Fracturing Regulation. Review of Policy Research, 35, 3: 439-465. DeSombre, E. R. (2005). Understanding United States unilateralism: Domestic sources of US international environmental policy. The Global Environment: Institutions, Law, and Policy, 181, 194. DeSombre, E. R. (1995). Baptists and bootleggers for the environment: the origins of United States unilateral sanctions. The Journal of Environment & Development, 4(1), 53-75. Gareau, B. (2013). From precaution to profit: contemporary challenges to environmental protection in the Montreal Protocol. Yale University Press. McCright, A. M., & Dunlap, R. E. (2003). Defeating Kyoto: The conservative movement's impact on US climate change policy. Social problems, 50(3), 348-373. John Mikler has a book on how such actors have deterred the greening of the car industry Don Munton. “Dispelling the Myths of the Acid Rain Story” Environment, Vol. 40 No. 6 (July-August 1998), 5-7, 27-34 . Ca. page 30, the article mentions coal companies creating a fake interest group to fight, or really to delay, acid rain controls in the 1980s. Bell, Shannon Elizabeth. 2013. Our Roots Run Deep as Ironweed: Appalachian Women and the Fight for Environmental Justice. Champaign (IL): University of Illinois Press. Bonds, Eric. 2011. “The Knowledge-Shaping Process: Elite Mobilization and Environmental Policy.” Critical Sociology 37(4):429–46. Bonds, Eric. 2015. “Challenging Global Warming’s New ‘Security Threat’ Status.” Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice 27(2):209–16. Bonds, Eric. 2016a. “Beyond Denialism: Think Tank Approaches to Climate Change.” Sociology Compass 10(4):306–17. Bonds, Eric. 2016b. “Losing the Arctic: The U.S. Corporate Community, the National-Security State, and Climate Change.” Environmental Sociology 2(1):5–17. Bonds, Eric. 2016c. “Upending Climate Violence Research: Fossil Fuel Corporations and the Structural Violence of Climate Change.” Human Ecology Review 22(2):3–23. Brulle, Robert J. 2014. “Institutionalizing Delay: Foundation Funding and the Creation of U.S. Climate Change Counter-Movement Organizations.” Climatic Change 122(4):681–94. Brulle, Robert J., Liesel Hall Turner, Jason Carmichael, and J. Craig Jenkins. 2007. “Measuring Social Movement Organization Populations: A Comprehensive Census of U.S. Environmental Movement Organizations.” Mobilization: An International Quarterly Review 12(3):195–211. Dauvergne, Peter. 2016. Environmentalism of the Rich. Boston: MIT Press. David Naguib Pellow. 2017. What Is Critical Environmental Justice? Polity Press. Derber, Charles. 2010. Greed to Green: Solving Climate Change and Remaking the Economy. Boulder (CO) and London: Paradigm Publishers. Downey, Liam. 2015. Inequality, Democracy, and the Environment. New York: New York University Press. Farrell, Justin. 2016a. “Corporate Funding and Ideological Polarization about Climate Change.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113(1):92–97. Farrell, Justin. 2016b. “Network Structure and Influence of the Climate Change Counter-Movement.” Nature Climate Change 6(4):370–74. Gonzalez, George A. 2001. Corporate Power and the Environment: The Political Economy of U.S. Environmental Policy. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Guel, Anel, Rachel Kelly, Rich Pirog, Jane Henderson, Kyeesha Wilcox, Taylor Wimberg, et al. 2017. An Annotated Bibliography on Structural Racism Present in the U.S. Food System. 5th ed. Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems. Jacques, Peter J., Riley E. Dunlap, and Mark Freeman. 2008. “The Organisation of Denial: Conservative Think Tanks and Environmental Scepticism.” Environmental Politics 17(3):349–85. Kamieniecki, Sheldon. 2006. Corporate America and Environmental Policy: How Often Does Business Get Its Way? Stanford, Calif: Stanford Law and Politics/Stanford University Press. Kraft, Michael E. and Sheldon Kamieniecki, eds. 2007. Business and Environmental Policy: Corporate Interests in the American Political System. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Mascarenhas, Michael J. 2016. “Where the Waters Divide: Neoliberal Racism, White Privilege and Environmental Injustice.” Race, Gender & Class; New Orleans 23(3/4):6–25. McCright, Aaron M. and Riley E. Dunlap. 2003. “Defeating Kyoto: The Conservative Movement’s Impact on U.S. Climate Change Policy.” Social Problems 50(3):348–73. Molotch, Harvey. 1976. “The City as a Growth Machine: Toward a Political Economy of Place.” American Journal of Sociology 82(2):309–32. Norgaard, Kari Marie. 2012. “Climate Denial and the Construction of Innocence: Reproducing Transnational Environmental Privilege in the Face of Climate Change.” Race, Gender & Class 19(1/2):80–103. Wishart, Ryan. 2012. “Coal River’s Last Mountain: King Coal’s Après Moi Le Déluge Reign.” Organization & Environment 25(4):470–85. ***** Debra Javeline Associate Professor | Department of Political Science | University of Notre Dame | 2060 Jenkins Nanovic Halls | Notre Dame, IN 46556 | tel: <tel:(574)%20631-2793> 574-631-2793 Fellow, <http://kroc.nd.edu/> Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, <http://nd.edu/~kellogg/> Kellogg Institute for International Studies, <http://nanovic.nd.edu/> Nanovic Institute for European Studies Core faculty, <http://germanandrussian.nd.edu/russian/faculty/program-faculty/RussianandEa stEuropeanStudies.shtml> Russian and East European Studies Program Affiliated faculty, <http://environmentalchange.nd.edu/> Notre Dame Environmental Change Initiative -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "gep-ed" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. 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