Andrew Jorgenson: Development, Inequality, and Disproportionality: Human Drivers of GHG Emissions and the Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being

Date: 

Monday, December 5, 2016, 4:00pm to 6:00pm

Location: 

William James Hall 1550

Transnational Studies Initiative and Politics & Social Change Workshop presentation by Andrew Jorgenson, Professor of Sociology, Boston College.

 

Abstract:

In this talk I begin with a summary of my recent collaborative research on the effects of development and income inequality on national-level anthropogenic carbon emissions, and how these relationships change through time. I highlight the implications of this research for longstanding theoretical debates in environmental sociology and our sister disciplines. Next, I provide an introduction to the emerging area of multidisciplinary research on nations’ carbon intensity of human well-being, where we assess the extent to which development and inequality partially shape such socioenvironmental relationships for nations in different structural and regional contexts. I conclude by describing current multimethod research where we investigate related empirical relationships, but at smaller scales, including the facility level and the US state level.

 

NOTE: Jorgenson’s presentation will not focus on one paper. Instead, he will provide an overview of his current work, which ties together various papers and projects.

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