RT @calebscoville: I say taken a chance because my 2019 T&S piece was on the relationship between extractive infrastructure, biological tax…
RT @calebscoville: I say taken a chance because my 2019 T&S piece was on the relationship between extractive infrastructure, biological tax…
RT @calebscoville: I say taken a chance because my 2019 T&S piece was on the relationship between extractive infrastructure, biological tax…
I say taken a chance because my 2019 T&S piece was on the relationship between extractive infrastructure, biological taxonomy, and environmental politics. Not exactly from the monoculture crop. https://t.co/cbVqGZBQyp
RT @calebscoville: I have already published on the case before. Here: https://t.co/ONAKfY4VvA And here: https://t.co/HuQJYgjZrt The book…
Paywall!
@calebscoville Yeah, pretty sure it was this one: https://t.co/BcoD9uqW5M Will just have to read the new one in AJS!
RT @cwgibson_: https://t.co/mt3zbeaSYN A new sociology paper that uses California water policy as an empirical site to develop a compelling…
RT @cwgibson_: https://t.co/mt3zbeaSYN A new sociology paper that uses California water policy as an empirical site to develop a compelling…
Hydraulic society and a “stupid little fish”: toward a historical ontology of endangerment https://t.co/D2mm7hrSAt
RT @cwgibson_: https://t.co/mt3zbeaSYN A new sociology paper that uses California water policy as an empirical site to develop a compelling…
RT @cwgibson_: https://t.co/mt3zbeaSYN A new sociology paper that uses California water policy as an empirical site to develop a compelling…
https://t.co/mt3zbeaSYN A new sociology paper that uses California water policy as an empirical site to develop a compelling theoretical argument about endangered species. Congrats on the paper @calebscoville. New sociology that uses Worster and takes up C
RT @tylerbateman: New environmental sociology article in Theory and Society "changes in the instrumentalization of the nonhuman environmen…
New environmental sociology article in Theory and Society "changes in the instrumentalization of the nonhuman environment can produce new knowledge of nature that allows actors to make claims and form coalitions that would be otherwise inconceivable" htt
Proud mama brag time! Sharing my son, soon to be Dr. Caleb Scoville's, post! After working on this article for about four years, I'm excited to finally release it into the world! This is the first piece to come... https://t.co/ATbSWjZZkE
Check out former BELS Fellow @calebscoville 's new article in Theory and Society, "Hydraulic society and a “stupid little fish”: toward a historical ontology of endangerment"