Thomas Malm
Professor
Green Ideology and its Relation to Modernity : Including a Case Study of the Green Party of Sweden
Author
Summary, in English
This is one reason why attaining a generally accepted ideology is proving to be a drawn-out process. A second reason considered here is the perceived anomalies inherent to the concept of ‘ideology’ itself. A third reason is a reluctance of many greens to engage in what they see as an abstruse discourse of ideological articulation, commonly preferring a ‘hands-on’, activist approach to everyday politics. One of the results of this resistance is that the green movement’s relationship to surrounding society is poorly understood. It is seldom realised, therefore, that a crucial division among greens is that between ‘eco-modernists’ and ‘ecological postmodernists’
A number of heuristic principles are identified that, it is argued, together represent a platform for the on-going theoretical development. Foremost among these is the concept of complementarity that promises to reconcile dialectics with modern systems theory. These theoretical ideas are viewed in connection with the Swedish Green Party.
Department/s
- Human Ecology
Publishing year
2008
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Humanekologiska avd., Lunds universitet
Topic
- Social and Economic Geography
Keywords
- epistemic values
- green theory
- Swedish Green Party
- praxis
- dialectics
- complementarity
- non-linearity
- systems theory
- ecologism
- ideology
- modernity
Status
Published
Supervisor
- Thomas Malm
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 978-91-628-7620-3 468
Defence date
17 December 2008
Defence time
10:15
Defence place
Kulturanatomens hörsal (sal 201), Biskopsg. 7, Lund
Opponent
- John Barry (Ph.D.)