Environmental manager

Environmental managers are involved in processes that seek to control some environmental entities in orientation to a plan or idea. Whether such control is possible, however, is contested. Examples for environmental managers range from corporate agents (corporate environmental managers) via managers of a nature reserve, to environmental and resource planning agents but, analytically seen, also involve indigenous environmental managers, farmers[1] or environmental activists. In many accounts, hope is held that environmental managers implement grand plans or political programmes. For example, specific schools of thought like ecological modernisation but also widespread conceptions of environmental management and environmental activism presuppose human agents who have ideas, make plans and engage in action oriented at the plans' implementation.[2] At the heart of the notion of environmental managers is, thus, a pragmatic[3] and rational actor who optimises environments in orientation to some aim. Critical academics point out that the very idea that such managers exist and are imagined as capable of managing may well be flawed.[4]

Corporate environmental managers

Steve Fineman studied UK managers and their "'green' selves and roles" in the last decade, suggesting that while environmental problems may be recognised by them, production is seen as legitimising pollution.[5] Optimistic accounts see managers as stewards of environmental ethics.[6] Literature differentiates different styles by managers to engage with the environment.[7] Critics suggest that corporate environmental managers are systematically positioned in a contradictory situation in which they are supposed to be committed to competing normative orientations (e.g. profits versus environmental protection measures which do not pay off).[8]

State environmental managers

State institutions can manage directly environments through their staff.[9] And state institutions can use civil agents on their behalf. Examples for the latter are farmers[10] who are to implement environmental regulation, citizens subject to e.g. recycling legislation or independent auditors who use laws as standards. Military agents can also act as environmental managers insofar as their action constitutes planned intervention in some environment (e.g. the burning of a forest, the destruction of streets or managing an open landscape for military training), trying to achieve military aims.

Scientists as environmental managers

A variety of scientists are involved directly in environmental management. Cases of ecologists acting as managers of ecosystems[11] are known.

Study of environmental managers

In the field of environmental management, until now, little attention has been paid to the study of those agents who supposedly put into practices the prescriptions.[12] For the realm of environmental management addressed by ecological modernisation, such agents can be termed agents of ecological modernisation.[13]

The very notion that humans may be able to manage environments is criticised for being top-down, anthropocentric and short-sighted.[14]

Studies of the work reality of practices of environmental managers are rarely classified as such. Studying the work reality of these managers indicates that it should be better conceptualised as situated action (for example by drawing on ethnomethodological studies of work practice) rather than rational action.[15] Thus, when attending to managers' practices, the notion of environmental management can be reconceptualised as a prescription. In optimistic accounts of environmental management, the latter is often mistaken for a description.

See also

References

  1. M. Kaljonen. Co-construction of agency and environmental management. the case of agri-environmental policy implementation at finnish farms. Journal of Rural Studies, 22(2):205 – 216, 2006.
  2. Lippert, I. 2010, "Agents of Ecological Modernisation", Lübeck, DAV, ISBN 978-3-86247-062-4.
  3. P. Prasad and M. Elmes. In the name of the practical: Unearthing the hegemony of pragmatics in the discourse of environmental management. Journal of Management Studies, 42(4):845–867, 2005.
  4. D. Levy. Environmental Management as Political Sustainability. Organization & Environment, 10(2):126–147, 1997.
  5. S. Fineman. Constructing the green manager. British Journal of Management, 8:31–38, 1997.
  6. W. Brown and N. Karagozoglu. Current practices in environmental management. Business Horizons, 41(4):12–18, Jul.-Aug. 1998.
  7. N. Gunningham, R. Kagan, and D. Thornton. Shades of green: business, regulation, and environment. Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2003.
  8. I. Lippert. Disposed to unsustainability? ecological modernisation as a techno-science enterprise with conflicting normative orientations. In A. Bammé, G. Getzinger, and B. Wieser, editors, Yearbook 2009 of the Institute for Advanced Studies on Science, Technology and Society, pages 275–290. Profil, München, 2010.
  9. K. Asdal. Enacting things through numbers: Taking nature into account/ing. Geoforum, 39(1):123–132, 2008.
  10. M. Kaljonen. Co-construction of agency and environmental management. the case of agri-environmental policy implementation at finnish farms. Journal of Rural Studies, 22(2):205 – 216, 2006.
  11. L. Asplen. Going with the flow: Living the mangle through environmental management practice. In A. Pickering and K. Guzik, editors, The mangle in practice: science, society, and becoming, Science and Cultural Theory, pages 163–184. Duke University Press Books, Durham and London, 2008.
  12. Lippert, I. 2010, "Agents of Ecological Modernisation", Lübeck, DAV, ISBN 978-3-86247-062-4.
  13. Lippert, I. 2010, "Agents of Ecological Modernisation", Lübeck, DAV, ISBN 978-3-86247-062-4.
  14. D. Bavington. Managerial ecology and its discontents: Exploring the complexities of control, careful use and coping in resource and environmental management. Environments - A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 30(3):3–22, 2002. and R. Bryant and G. Wilson. Rethinking environmental management. Progress in Human Geography, 22(3):321–343, Sep 1998.
  15. I. Lippert. Extended carbon cognition as a machine. Computational Culture, 1(1), 2011.

External links

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