Abstract

The crux of sustainability concerns hinges on humanity's overshoot of our global carrying capacity, which we currently exceed by about 50 %. Overshoot of the earth's natural resource bases militates against our current and future pros- pects for sustainability. Despite the theoretical and practical impetus to examine these dynamics, there is a dearth of empirical sociological research that analyzes overshoot. The paper fills this gap by offering a structural equation model of each nation's relative contributions to overshoot. The model tests key theorizations in the environmental sociology, development, and global political-economy literatures, and adds to them by theorizing and empirically testing ecofeminist positions that the status of women affects and is affected by environmental conditions. Findings support ecofeminist interpretations that resource degradation yields adverse impacts on women and that their representation in government bodes well for the envi- ronment. The theoretical, empirical, and policy-based conclusions and implications are treated, as well as future areas of research.

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