Free market ideology and deregulation in Colorado’s oil fields: Evidence for triple movement activism?

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Free market ideology and deregulation in Colorado’s oil fields: Evidence for triple movement activism?
Abstract
Unconventional oil and gas extraction (UOGE) has spurred an unprecedented boom in onshore production in the US. Despite a surge in related research, a void exists regarding inquiries into policy outcomes and perceptions. To address this, support for federal regulatory exemptions for UOGE is examined using survey data collected in 2015 from two Northern Colorado communities. Current regulatory exemptions for UOGE can be understood as components of broader societal processes of neoliberalization. Free market ideology increases public support for federal regulatory exemptions for UOGE. Perceived negative impacts do not necessarily drive people to support increased federal regulation. Utilizing neo-Polanyian theory, interaction between free market ideology and perceived negative impacts is explored. Free market ideology appears to moderate people’s views of regulation:increasingthe effect of perceived negative impacts while simultaneously increasing support forderegulation. To conclude, the ways in which free market ideology might normalize the impacts of UOGE activity are discussed.
Publication
Environmental Politics
Volume
26
Issue
3
Pages
521-545
Date
May 2017
Journal Abbr
Environmental Politics
Language
English
ISSN
09644016
Short Title
Free market ideology and deregulation in Colorado’s oil fields
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Malin, Stephanie A., Adam Mayer, Kelly Shreeve, Shawn K. Olson-Hazboun, and John Adgate. 2017. “Free Market Ideology and Deregulation in Colorado’s Oil Fields: Evidence for Triple Movement Activism?” Environmental Politics 26(3): 521–45.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • Colorado
  • deregulation - government policy
  • double movement
  • environmental sociology
  • fracking
  • free enterprise
  • free markets
  • gas extraction
  • hydraulic fracturing
  • market ideology
  • neoliberalism
  • oil fields
  • public support
  • triple movement
  • unconventional oil and gas production

Comments and observations

Be the first to comment!
Please email us your comments, and we will gladly review your submission.