Fracking the Neighborhood: Reluctant Activists and Natural Gas Drilling

Fracking the Neighborhood: Reluctant Activists and Natural Gas Drilling

by Jessica Smartt Gullion
Fracking the Neighborhood: Reluctant Activists and Natural Gas Drilling

Fracking the Neighborhood: Reluctant Activists and Natural Gas Drilling

by Jessica Smartt Gullion

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Overview

What happens when natural gas drilling moves into an urban area: how communities in North Texas responded to the environmental and health threats of fracking.

When natural gas drilling moves into an urban or a suburban neighborhood, a two-hundred-foot-high drill appears on the other side of a back yard fence and diesel trucks clog a quiet two-lane residential street. Children seem to be having more than the usual number of nosebleeds. There are so many local cases of cancer that the elementary school starts a cancer support group. In this book, Jessica Smartt Gullion examines what happens when natural gas extraction by means of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," takes place not on wide-open rural land but in a densely populated area with homes, schools, hospitals, parks, and businesses. Gullion focuses on fracking in the Barnett Shale, the natural-gas-rich geological formation under the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. She gives voice to the residents--for the most part educated, middle class, and politically conservative--who became reluctant anti-drilling activists in response to perceived environmental and health threats posed by fracking.

Gullion offers an overview of oil and gas development and describes the fossil-fuel culture of Texas, the process of fracking, related health concerns, and regulatory issues (including the notorious "Halliburton loophole"). She chronicles the experiences of community activists as they fight to be heard and to get the facts about the safety of fracking.

Touted as a greener alternative and a means to reduce dependence on foreign oil, natural gas development is an important part of American energy policy. Yet, as this book shows, it comes at a cost to the local communities who bear the health and environmental burdens.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262534628
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 09/08/2017
Series: Urban and Industrial Environments
Pages: 210
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.60(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jessica Smartt Gullion, formerly Chief Epidemiologist at the Denton County Health Department in Denton, Texas, is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Texas Woman's University.

What People are Saying About This

Brenda Phillips

Jessica Gullion has written a unique ethnography dedicated to one of today's pressing and controversial issues: fracking. This volume should be required reading in any environmental sociology course and would serve well as a case study for research methods as well. Fracking the Neighborhood is likely to garner significant national attention while debates continue among residents, companies, and policy makers over the extraction of natural resources through contentious means.

Seamus McGraw

Gullion guides her readership deep into one of the most heated controversies in our fossil-fuel-addicted culture. Meticulously researched and written with an eye for nuance, this book is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature about fracking. Read it. Regardless of where you stand on the issue, you're likely to learn something.

Endorsement

Jessica Gullion has written a unique ethnography dedicated to one of today's pressing and controversial issues: fracking. This volume should be required reading in any environmental sociology course and would serve well as a case study for research methods as well. Fracking the Neighborhood is likely to garner significant national attention while debates continue among residents, companies, and policy makers over the extraction of natural resources through contentious means.

Brenda Phillips, Ohio University-Chillicothe, author of Disaster Recovery and Qualitative Disaster Research

From the Publisher

Gullion guides her readership deep into one of the most heated controversies in our fossil-fuel-addicted culture. Meticulously researched and written with an eye for nuance, this book is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature about fracking. Read it. Regardless of where you stand on the issue, you're likely to learn something.

Seamus McGraw, author of Betting the Farm on a Drought: Stories from the Front Lines of Climate Change and The End of Country: Dispatches from the Frack Zone

Jessica Gullion has written a unique ethnography dedicated to one of today's pressing and controversial issues: fracking. This volume should be required reading in any environmental sociology course and would serve well as a case study for research methods as well. Fracking the Neighborhood is likely to garner significant national attention while debates continue among residents, companies, and policy makers over the extraction of natural resources through contentious means.

Brenda Phillips, Ohio University-Chillicothe, author of Disaster Recovery and Qualitative Disaster Research

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