En el vientre de la bestia. Reconstrucción relacional de la campaña contra el fracking en Texas

This article offers a relational account of the emergence, development, and impact of a social movement against urban fracking in Denton, Texas. It highlights the role played by the interactions between grassroots activism, local officials, and other stakeholders in the political c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Auyero, Javier, Hernández, Maricarmen, Stitt, Mary Ellen
Format: Online
Language:Spanish
Editor: El Colegio de México 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://estudiossociologicos.colmex.mx/index.php/es/article/view/1789
Journal:

Estudios Sociológicos

Description
Summary:This article offers a relational account of the emergence, development, and impact of a social movement against urban fracking in Denton, Texas. It highlights the role played by the interactions between grassroots activism, local officials, and other stakeholders in the political construction of shared understandings of environmental risk. Drawing upon scholarship on risk perceptions and on social movement outcomes, the article argues that as a result of relationships of conflict and cooperation between activists, officials, residents, and oil and gas industry representatives, a field of opinion about the potential (negative) impacts of fracking emerged. It shows that grassroots, face-to-face, joint action played a key role in the campaign to ban fracking. Localized collective action should be at the front and center of social scientific examinations of shared understandings of environmental danger.