- Author(s): [No author name available]
- Author(s) ID: [No author id available]
- Document Type: Book Chapter
- Publication Stage: Final
- Volume: 21 | Issue: | Article Number:
- Page Start – 47 | Page End – 61 | Page Count:
- Cited By:
- DOI: 10.1108/S2051-503020170000021005
- EID: Scopus2-s2.0-85041341363
This chapter will examine the response of a rural community in Ireland to the imposition of a gas pipeline on their farms, in the western coastal county of Mayo. This analysis will include a discussion of the concept of ‘rural community sentiment’ (Leonard, 2006, 2008a, 2008b) as a factor in the mobilisation of community campaigns against infrastructural projects which are perceived as a threat to existing ways of life in regional areas. The chapter will also explore key theoretical concepts for this community-based responses to environmental degradation in rural areas, including critical criminology and rural criminology, resource curse theory and ask whether the campaign was ecopopulist, with issues of social and environmental justice at its core. This will be achieved through a case study approach. In so doing, the chapter will highlight the basis for rural community’s campaigns of opposition to development projects imposed by corporate or state bodies in the Irish case. © Liam Leonard, 2017.
Advances in Sustainability and Environmental Justice