Ecologists and Environmental Politics

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288 pages 1997

About This Book

Ecologists, like other scientists, have for decades debated their role in society. While some argue that ecologists should participate in environmental politics, others feel that they should focus exclusively on scientific issues. In this book Stephen Bocking explores the debate by recounting the history of ecology in Great Britain, the United States, and Canada since the 1940s.

Bocking tells this history through four case studies: the origins and early research of the Nature Conservancy in Great Britain; the development of ecology at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee; the work of the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study in New Hampshire; and research in fisheries ecology conducted by the University of Toronto and the Ontario provincial government. In each institution ecologists influenced the development of their discipline.

By comparing these case studies, Bocking demonstrates how the places of contemporary science - laboratories, landscapes, and funding agencies - and its purposes, as expressed through the political roles of expertise and specific managerial and regulatory responsibilities, have shaped contemporary ecology and its application to pressing environmental problems.

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