The Power of Narrative in Environmental Networks
Author
: Raul Lejano and Mrill Ingram, and Helen Ingram
Subject
: Environmentalism, Environmental policy, Policy sciences, Social networks
Publisher
: The MIT Press
Summary :This book is a product of an extended conversation between a geographer
and two policy scholars. We all share an interest in networks and
relationality because these ideas help analyze environmental governance.
Our individual scholarship has revolved around the opening up of the
complex combinations of personal, community, and public forces and
structures that inform the decisions people make, or try to make, about
the environment. We were all attracted by the power of networks to
describe this complexity but also interested in developing analytical tools
sensitive to the heterogeneity of networks of environmental governance
that we were all studying. How could we grasp some of this diversity in
a way that helps explain innovation, or lack of it, regarding environmental
governance? We all saw potential in the power of story and in tools
offered by literary theory and analysis to capture the diversity of personal
and public, affective and institutional dimensions. We sought a way to
describe narratives not as good, just, hapless, and ineffective, but instead
as reflecting the concerns, hesitations, and ambitions of people as they
react to, shape, and are shaped by their environment.
Coming from different disciplinary backgrounds, and informed by
different literature, it took time (over two years) to create a common
framework and to develop an analytic that appeared robust and useful
to all of us. In working toward this goal, we were enabled by many other
people and have benefited greatly from their advice and input. Early
inspiration stemmed in part from the participation of one author (Mrill
Ingram) in a faculty seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on
narratives, networks, and the HBO series The Wire . The motivation
behind the seminar, held in the fall of 2009, came from a collaboration
between UW sociology professor Lew Friedland, who has worked extensively
with networks, and Caroline Levine, professor of English, an
authority on narrative.
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