What is the ‘ social construction of nature ’ ? A typology and sympathetic critique

This paper seeks to clarify what is meant by the ‘social construction of nature’, which has become a crude but common term used to describe very different understandings of nature, knowledge and the world. I distinguish two broad varieties of construction talk in the social sciences: construction-as-refutation and construction-as-philosophical-critique. The first uses the construction metaphor to refute false beliefs about the world and is consistent with orthodox philosophical stances, such as positivism and realism. By contrast, I identify four other, more radical sorts of construction-as-philosophical-critique that use the construction metaphor to question the culture/nature, subject/object and representation/reality dualisms that provide the conventional philosophical foundation for distinguishing true conceptions of nature from false ones. Another source of confusion has been the question of precisely what is meant by the term ‘nature’. Making distinctions among different senses of that term can provide some badly needed clarity in debates about the social construction of nature. It also highlights a broad difference between those for whom the social construction of nature refers to the construction of our concepts of nature and those for whom the construction of nature refers to the process of constructing nature in the physical and material sense. That distinction, in turn, suggests two major, if also somewhat related, points of theoretical contention: first, the epistemological significance of understanding concepts of nature as constructed; second, the philosophical and political implications of arguing that nature is a socially constructed and contingent phenomenon. These are difficult philosophical and political questions, and the variety of constructionisms suggests that it is possible to answer them in a number of different ways.

[1]  R. Dunlap,et al.  Struggling with human exemptionalism: The rise, decline and revitalization of environmental sociology , 1994 .

[2]  R. Murphy The Sociological Construction of Science without Nature , 1994 .

[3]  A. Escobar,et al.  Constructing Nature: Elements for a poststructural political ecology , 2002 .

[4]  M. Dear Who's Afraid of Postmodernism?: Reflections on Symanski and Cosgrove , 1994 .

[5]  Aaron M. McCright,et al.  Challenging global warming as a social problem: An analysis of the conservative movement's counter-claims , 2000 .

[6]  S. Schneider A Constructive Deconstruction of Deconstructionists: A Response to Demeritt , 2001 .

[7]  L. Winner The Gloves Come Off: Shattered Alliances in Science and Technology Studies , 1996, Science Wars.

[8]  B. Martin,et al.  Captives of Controversy: The Myth of the Neutral Social Researcher in Contemporary Scientific Controversies , 1990 .

[9]  A. Sayer Essentialism, Social Constructionism, and beyond , 1997 .

[10]  Bruce Willems-Braun Buried Epistemologies: The Politics of Nature in (Post)colonial British Columbia , 1997 .

[11]  Matthew Gandy,et al.  Crumbling land: the postmodernity debate and the analysis of environmental problems , 1996 .

[12]  J. D. Proctor,et al.  The Social Construction of Nature: Relativist Accusations, Pragmatist and Critical Realist Responses , 1998 .

[13]  B. Wisner,et al.  Taking the naturalness out of natural disasters , 1976, Nature.

[14]  Margaret Fitzsimmons THE MATTER OF NATURE , 1989 .

[15]  H. M. Collins Captives and Victims: Comment on Scott, Richards, and Martin , 1991 .

[16]  D. Worster The Ecology of Order and Chaos , 1990, Environmental History Review.

[17]  Jerry Williams Knowledge, consequences, and experience : The social construction of environmental problems , 1998 .

[18]  Erik Swyngedouw,et al.  Modernity and Hybridity: Nature, Regeneracionismo, and the Production of the Spanish Waterscape, 1890–1930 , 1999 .

[19]  Jacquelin Burgess,et al.  Social Constructions of Nature: A Case Study of Conflicts over the Development of Rainham Marshes , 1994 .

[20]  Noel Castree,et al.  he construction of nature and the nature of construction: analytical and political tools for building survivable futures , 2005 .

[21]  B. Wynne Uncertainty and environmental learning: reconceiving science and policy in the preventive paradigm. , 1992 .