Adua Lazarus, York Richard, Schuelke-Leech Beth-Anne
Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, IA, USA.
Department of Sociology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1291, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2016 Mar;56:26-43. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.10.003. Epub 2015 Oct 30.
Understanding the manifold human and physical dimensions of climate change has become an area of great interest to researchers in recent decades. Using a U.S. nationally-representative data set and drawing on the ecological modernization, political economy, and human ecology perspectives, this study examines the impacts of energy efficiency technologies, affluence, household demographics, and biophysical characteristics on residential CO2 emissions. Overall, the study provides mixed support for the ecological modernization perspective. While several findings are consistent with the theory's expectation that modern societies can harness technology to mitigate human impacts on the environment, others directly contradict it. Also, the theory's prediction of an inverted U-shaped relationship between affluence and environmental impacts is contradicted. The evidence is somewhat more supportive of the political economy and human ecology perspectives, with affluence, some indicators of technology, household demographics, and biophysical characteristics emerging as important drivers of residential CO2 emissions.
近几十年来,了解气候变化在人类和自然方面的多方面情况已成为研究人员极为感兴趣的领域。本研究使用美国全国代表性数据集,并借鉴生态现代化、政治经济学和人类生态学的观点,考察了能源效率技术、富裕程度、家庭人口统计学特征和生物物理特征对住宅二氧化碳排放的影响。总体而言,该研究对生态现代化观点提供了喜忧参半的支持。虽然一些研究结果与该理论的预期一致,即现代社会可以利用技术减轻人类对环境的影响,但其他结果却与之直接矛盾。此外,该理论关于富裕程度与环境影响之间呈倒U形关系的预测也与之矛盾。证据在一定程度上更支持政治经济学和人类生态学观点,富裕程度、一些技术指标、家庭人口统计学特征和生物物理特征成为住宅二氧化碳排放的重要驱动因素。