Description

Book Synopsis
Golf is a major global industry. The sport is played by more than 60 million people worldwide and there are more than 32,000 courses in 140 countries across the globe. This book looks at the power relationships in and around golf, examining whether the industry has demonstrated sufficient leadership on environmental matters to be trusted to make weighty decisions with implications for public and environmental health. The first comprehensive study of the varying responses to golf-related environmental issues, it is based on extensive empirical work, including research into historical materials and interviews with stakeholders in golf such as course superintendents, protesters and health professionals. The authors examine golf as a sport and as a global industry, drawing on and contributing to literatures pertaining to environmental sociology, global social movements, institutional change, corporate environmentalism and the sociology of sport.

Table of Contents

Part I: Introduction and tools for seeing golf sociologically
1. Introduction: approaching golf and environmental issues
2. Light green to dark green: how to make sense of responses to environmental problems
Part II: Background and history
3. Waging a war on pests: golf comes to America
4. Golf in consumer culture and the making of Augusta National syndrome
Part III: The light-greening of golf
5. The turn to responsible golf and the roots of golf's light-green movement
6. Environmentalism incorporated: professionalization and post-politics in the time of responsible golf
7. Light-green regulation? Environmental managerialism and golf's conspicuous exemption
Part IV: The dark-greening of golf
8. Anti-golfers across the world unite! Global and local forms of resistance to golf-course development
9. Organic golf 'on the fringe': the potential and challenges of a chemical-free golf alternative
Part V: Conclusion
10. Reflections, recommendations and minor utopian visions for a game we love
Index

The Greening of Golf: Sport, Globalization and

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    A Paperback / softback by Brad Millington, Brian Wilson

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      View other formats and editions of The Greening of Golf: Sport, Globalization and by Brad Millington

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 24/09/2019
      ISBN13: 9781526143662, 978-1526143662
      ISBN10: 1526143666

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Golf is a major global industry. The sport is played by more than 60 million people worldwide and there are more than 32,000 courses in 140 countries across the globe. This book looks at the power relationships in and around golf, examining whether the industry has demonstrated sufficient leadership on environmental matters to be trusted to make weighty decisions with implications for public and environmental health. The first comprehensive study of the varying responses to golf-related environmental issues, it is based on extensive empirical work, including research into historical materials and interviews with stakeholders in golf such as course superintendents, protesters and health professionals. The authors examine golf as a sport and as a global industry, drawing on and contributing to literatures pertaining to environmental sociology, global social movements, institutional change, corporate environmentalism and the sociology of sport.

      Table of Contents

      Part I: Introduction and tools for seeing golf sociologically
      1. Introduction: approaching golf and environmental issues
      2. Light green to dark green: how to make sense of responses to environmental problems
      Part II: Background and history
      3. Waging a war on pests: golf comes to America
      4. Golf in consumer culture and the making of Augusta National syndrome
      Part III: The light-greening of golf
      5. The turn to responsible golf and the roots of golf's light-green movement
      6. Environmentalism incorporated: professionalization and post-politics in the time of responsible golf
      7. Light-green regulation? Environmental managerialism and golf's conspicuous exemption
      Part IV: The dark-greening of golf
      8. Anti-golfers across the world unite! Global and local forms of resistance to golf-course development
      9. Organic golf 'on the fringe': the potential and challenges of a chemical-free golf alternative
      Part V: Conclusion
      10. Reflections, recommendations and minor utopian visions for a game we love
      Index

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