Privileged Access, Privileged Accounts: Toward a Socially Structured Theory of Resources and Discourses
Details
| Series: | CEPA-CPR Seminar |
| Speaker: | William Freudenburg, UC Santa Barbara |
| Location: | Maxwell Auditorium |
| Date: | Mon, Sep 19, 2005
|
| Time: | 4:00 PM |
Additional Information
Environmental harms involve a “double diversion” – two forms of
privilege that deserve greater attention. The first involves
disproportionality, or the privileged diversion of rights/resources:
Contrary to common assumptions, much environmental damage is not
economically “necessary” – instead, it represents privileged access to
the environment. It is made possible in part by the second diversion –
the diversion of attention, or distraction – largely through
taken-for-granted or privileged accounts, which are rarely questioned,
even in leftist critiques. Data show that, rather than producing
advanced materials, major polluters tend to be inefficient producers of
low-value commodities, and rather than being major employers, they can
have emissions-to-jobs ratios a thousand times worse than the economy
as a whole. Instead of simply focusing on overall/average levels of
environmental problems, sociologists also need to examine
disproportionalities, analyzing the socially structured nature of
environmental and discursive privileges. Doing so can offer important
opportunities for insights, not just about nature, but also about the
nature of power, and about the power of the naturalized.