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Home » Christina Ergas

Christina Ergas

Christina Ergas

December 9, 2023 by

ADDRESS
The University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN 37996-0490
Email
cergas@utk.edu
Phone
(865) 974-6021

Christina Ergas

Associate Professor

Curriculum Vitae

Education

Ph.D. 2013 University of Oregon

Interest Area

Environmental Sociology, Environmental Justice, Globalization and Development, Gender and the Environment

Research

Christina Ergas researches the relationship between social inequity and the natural environment, with a focus toward how power relations structure access and exposure to environmental goods and harms.

Publications

Books

  • 2021 – Ergas, Christina, Surviving Collapse: Building Community Toward Radical Sustainability. NY: Oxford University Press.

Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles                          

  • 2023 – Ergas, Christina and Richard York. “A Plant by Any Other Name… Foundations for Materialist Sociological Plant Studies.” Journal of Sociology. https://doi.org/10.1177/14407833211017209
  • 2021 – Ergas, Christina, Patrick Greiner, Julius McGee, and Matt Clement. “Does Gender Climate Influence Climate Change?: The Multidimensionality of Gender Equality and its Countervailing Effects on the Carbon Intensity of Well-Being.” Sustainability. 13(7): 3956; https://doi.org/10.3390/su13073956    
  • 2020 – McGee, Julius, Mackenzie Christensen, Patrick Greiner, Christina Ergas, and Matt Clement. “Gender Inequality, Reproductive Justice, and Decoupling Economic Growth and Emissions: A Panel Analysis of the Moderating Association of Gender Equality on the Relationship between Economic Growth and CO2 Emissions.” Environmental Sociology.
  • 2018 – McGee, Julius, Christina Ergas, and Matthew Clement. “Racing to Reduce Emissions: Assessing the Relationship between Race and Environmental Impacts from Transportation.” Sociology of Development.
  • 2017 – McGee, Julius, Christina Ergas, Patrick Greiner, and Matthew Clement. “How do Slums Change the Relationship Between Urbanization and the Carbon Intensity of Well-Being?” PLOS One.
  • 2017 – University of Oregon Social Science Feminist Network. “The Burden of Invisible Work in Academia: Social Inequalities and Time Use in Five University Departments.” Humboldt Journal of Social Relations.
  • 2016 – Ergas, Christina, Matthew Clement, and Julius McGee. “Urban Density and the Metabolic Reach of Metropolitan Areas: A Panel Analysis of Per Capita Transportation Emissions at the County-Level.” Social Science Research. 58:243-253.
  • 2016 – Ergas, Christina and Matthew Clement. “Ecovillages, Restitution, and the Political-Economic Opportunity Structure: An Urban Case Study in Mitigating the Antagonism between Humans and Nature.” Critical Sociology. 42(7-8):1195–1211.
  • 2015 – Clement, Matthew, Christina Ergas, and Patrick Greiner. “The Environmental Consequences of Rural and Urban Population Change: An Exploratory Spatial Panel Study of Forest Cover in the Southern United States, 2001-2006.” Rural Sociology. 80(1):108-136.
  • 2012 – Ergas, Christina and Richard York.  “Women’s Status and Carbon Dioxide Emissions: A Quantitative Cross-national Analysis.”  Social Science Research. 41:965-976
    * Featured as a Research Highlight in Nature Climate Change. 2(5):312 (2012).
  • 2011 – York, Richard and Christina Ergas. “Women’s Status and World-System Position: An Exploratory Analysis.” Journal of World-Systems Research. 17(1):147-164.
  • 2011 – York, Richard, Christina Ergas, Eugene A. Rosa, and Thomas Dietz. “It’s a Material World: Trends in Material Extraction in China, India, Indonesia, and Japan.” Nature and Culture. 6(2):103-122.
  • 2010 – Ergas, Christina. “A Model of Sustainable Living: Collective Identity in an Urban Ecovillage.” Organization and Environment. 23(1):32-54.

Chapters in Edited Volumes

  • Forthcoming – Ergas, Christina. “Gender and Climate Justice.” Solving the Climate Crisis: Social Scientists Speak Out. Edited by Kristin Haltinner and Dilshani Sarathchandra. Routledge.
  • Forthcoming –  Ergas, Christina. “Real Utopian Stories to Counter the Climate Apocalypse.” Good Stories: Telling Against Trouble. NY: NYU Press.
  • 2021 – Ergas, Christina, Laura McKinney, and Shannon Bell.  “Intersectionality and the Environment.” International Handbook of Environmental Sociology. Springer.
  • 2014 – Ergas, Christina. “Barriers to Sustainability: Gendered Divisions of Labor in Cuban Urban Agriculture.” In From Sustainable to Resilient Cities: Global Concerns and Urban Efforts. Vol. 14. Edited by William G. Holt. Bingley, UK: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

Book Reviews

  • 2013 – Ergas, Christina. Review of Sustainable Urban Agriculture in Cuba. By Sinan Koont. (University Press of Florida). Monthly Review. 64(10):46-52.
  • 2007 – Ergas, Christina. Review of From Hire to Liar: The Role of Deception in the Workplace. By David Shulman. (Cornell University Press). Work in Progress: Organizations, Occupations and Work Newsletter. Spring, pp. 10-11.

Other Publications 

  • 2014 –Ergas, Christina. “Considering Gender Equity: Pursuing More Sustainable Urban Environments.” Community and Urban Sociology Section Newsletter. Spring, 26(2):6-11.
  • 2012 –Ergas, Christina. “Making the Invisible Visible: Gendered Work in Havana, Cuba’s Urban Agriculture.” Center for The Study of Women and Society Annual Review. P.10

Sociology

College of Arts and Sciences

1115 Volunteer Blvd (Suite 901)
McClung Tower
Knoxville TN 37996

Phone: 865-974-6021

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

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