
@article{ref1,
title="Cold Monsters and Ecological Leviathans: Reflections on the Relationships between States and the Environment",
journal="Geography compass",
year="2008",
author="Whitehead, Mark",
volume="2",
number="2",
pages="414-432",
abstract="The relationship between state administrations and environmental issues has been an enduring concern of geographers, environmentalists, philosophers, sociologists and political scientists for a considerable length of time. This article provides a critical review of approaches to the study of state–environment relations across of a range of different disciplines. While states have been criticised as either ineffectual, unjust, or even irrelevant managers of socio-environmental relations in the modern world, this article argues that states continue to play a significant role within a range of environmental issues at a number of different scales. In order to explore the contested role of the state within contemporary environmental affairs, this article outlines three broad sets of approaches to state–environment relations: normative perspectives, critical approaches and notions of environmental governmentality. It is asserted that approaches adopting theories of environmental governmentality offer a critical, but highly creative, framework in and through which to study the contemporary entanglements of states and the environment.<p />",
language="",
issn="1749-8198",
doi="10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00088.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-8198.2007.00088.x"
}