Shannon Elizabeth Bell
- Published in print:
- 2016
- Published Online:
- September 2016
- ISBN:
- 9780262034340
- eISBN:
- 9780262333597
- Item type:
- chapter
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
- DOI:
- 10.7551/mitpress/9780262034340.003.0010
- Subject:
- Environmental Science, Environmental Studies
Chapter 9 presents the story of what transpired in each of the five communities during the Photovoice project. It describes the significant events and micro-level interactions that took place during ...
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Chapter 9 presents the story of what transpired in each of the five communities during the Photovoice project. It describes the significant events and micro-level interactions that took place during the Photovoice meetings and in the larger communities, providing an analysis of how those events and interactions influenced the likelihood that group members would publicly acknowledge their concerns about coal industry practices or become involved in environmental justice activism. This chapter provides important insight into the power dynamics in these small communities and the ways in which an “outsider stigma” can be applied to certain individuals–even local residents–as a way of discrediting their grievances about coal industry practices. This chapter also describes the way in which a number of the Photovoice participants who had expressed unhappiness with coal industry practices chose not to directly advocate for changes to the coal industry but instead decided to become involved in “non-contentious advocacy issues,” community problems–like poor road conditions or litter–that did not challenge the power structure but still gave these residents the satisfaction of taking action on behalf of their communities.Less
Chapter 9 presents the story of what transpired in each of the five communities during the Photovoice project. It describes the significant events and micro-level interactions that took place during the Photovoice meetings and in the larger communities, providing an analysis of how those events and interactions influenced the likelihood that group members would publicly acknowledge their concerns about coal industry practices or become involved in environmental justice activism. This chapter provides important insight into the power dynamics in these small communities and the ways in which an “outsider stigma” can be applied to certain individuals–even local residents–as a way of discrediting their grievances about coal industry practices. This chapter also describes the way in which a number of the Photovoice participants who had expressed unhappiness with coal industry practices chose not to directly advocate for changes to the coal industry but instead decided to become involved in “non-contentious advocacy issues,” community problems–like poor road conditions or litter–that did not challenge the power structure but still gave these residents the satisfaction of taking action on behalf of their communities.