(Press-News.org) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The response to a 1969 oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, reveals how the modern environmental movement has been used to protect the interests of private homeowners, said a University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researcher.
Landscape architecture professor Pollyanna Rhee chronicled how affluent homeowners use what she calls “ownership environmentalism” to focus on protection of property and community norms, rather than society as a whole, in her new book “Natural Attachments: The Domestication of American Environmentalism, 1920–1970.”
Rhee said she was interested in examining how people create an environmental consciousness and develop ideas about what a healthy, high-quality environment looks like. Santa Barbara was a good case study because of its long history of community involvement and because the oil spill shone a spotlight on its environmental concerns, said Rhee, who spent a year-and-a-half living and doing research in the city.
The Santa Barbara oil spill drew national attention for its damage to the picturesque coastline and inspired the founding of Earth Day and the Environmental Protection Agency. In the same year as the oil spill, the heavily polluted Cuyahoga River in Ohio caught fire, but the fire did not garner the same level of news coverage and outrage as did the oil spill, Rhee said.
At the time of these disasters, the country was moving from a focus on conservation, which was concerned with natural resource management and was led by scientists, experts and government officials, to environmentalism as a social movement of ordinary citizens, she said.
Their concerns included exposure to chemicals and industrial pollution, the nuclear threat, the destruction of wilderness for highways and suburbs, and the desire for places for outdoor recreation.
“They were concerned about quality of life, and environmentalism was a big part of that,” Rhee said.
At the same time, the government was encouraging home ownership and private developers were creating neighborhoods with racially restrictive covenants. Ownership environmentalism centered on maintaining social hierarchies and protecting particular places, and it opted for protection rather than justice, she wrote.
Such environmentalism was often seen on the small scale of everyday lives — in how people plant their lawns, for example — rather than on a national policy level. “There is not an overarching political vision or a well-informed idea of what environmental quality should be,” Rhee said.
The social movement echoed earlier rhetoric of the 1920s and ‘30s, which concerned itself with local issues, such as the natural beauty of a place, and was led by home gardeners and voluntary civic organizations run mostly by women, she said.
After a 1925 earthquake destroyed Santa Barbara’s downtown, the city rebuilt in a unified Spanish Colonial Revival architectural style now codified in city regulations.
“It was embraced as a style that was supposed to be aligned with the climate and geography of the place, the mountains and beaches, and the Spanish and Mexican history that wealthy whites wanted to embrace,” Rhee said.
The oil spill challenged their expectations of the environment, but the concerns weren’t about changing the status quo or seeking a reduction in fossil fuel use, Rhee said. Instead, the citizens of Santa Barbara sought to protect their community and believed oil extraction should be located elsewhere, such as in Alaska or the Middle East.
“The political horizons for this type of environmentalism are restricted to a privileged few. It conveys a lot of what people think of as the scope of their environmental responsibilities. I think it’s a major reason why environmentalism has faced a lot of criticism for its lack of concern about equity and justice,” she said.
The criticisms of the environmental movement include that it has no relevance to the lives of many people and appeals to a narrow range of interests of the well-off for open spaces, wilderness and biodiversity. It also is seen as antigrowth. Communities have used ownership environmentalism to oppose multifamily housing developments and urban sprawl.
“Environmentalism is a pretty effective weapon, not just in Santa Barbara but in a lot of affluent places more generally, to use the protection of green space or nature preserves as a way of limiting a certain type of development,” Rhee said. “The limited social relevance of environmentalism is because of how these interests are wielded — not in the way of expanding equity or justice but in protecting people who already have these privileges.”
Ownership environmentalism is not limited to Santa Barbara. Such attitudes are shared in other affluent communities. But they are facing more outward criticism from environmental justice and climate activism movements and from advocates for affordable housing, Rhee said.
She said she believes there is value in thinking about environmental issues such as biodiversity, as well as examining the way we live and how that aligns with larger political and structural forces.
“It’s worth thinking about how people’s everyday lives and experiences are major factors shaping how they think about environmental health and environmental quality,” Rhee said. “I wanted to see how people respond to environmental pressures that are close to home.”
Editor’s note: To contact Pollyanna Rhee, email cyrhee@illinois.edu.
END
Book explores how ‘domestication’ of environmentalism limits who it protects
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign landscape architecture professor Pollyanna Rhee examines how the modern environmental movement has been used to protect the property and interests of affluent homeowners in her new book, “Natural Attachments."
2025-06-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Leading scientists: Trees and tech needed for carbon removal to help meet the 2C goal of the Paris agreement
2025-06-11
Researchers released a peer-reviewed analysis in the academic journal Climate Policy today arguing that the urgent work of removing excess carbon from the atmosphere — known as carbon dioxide removal (CDR) — can’t just rely on complex, untested techniques to capture carbon dioxide (CO2) and inject it deep underground or pump it into the ocean. Rather, they show that nature-based solutions, which include restoring forests and other ecosystems that capture atmospheric CO2 using the ancient biochemical process ...
New study from landmark trial suggests avocados may play a role in sleep, a key factor in cardiovascular health
2025-06-11
MISSION VIEJO, Calif. (June 11, 2025) – A new study suggests that eating one avocado a day may positively impact sleep. Science now confirms sleep is as important for good health as nutrition and exercise. In a secondary analysis of the largest randomized controlled trial on avocados to date, researchers found adults who consumed one avocado daily for six months reported better sleep compared to those who ate fewer than two avocados per month.
As, per the CDC, getting enough sleep can help lower the risk factors for heart disease, these findings add to a growing body of evidence supporting avocados as a heart-healthy food and mark the first time avocado consumption ...
How flies grow their gyroscopes: Study reveals how flight stabilizers take shape
2025-06-11
A team from the Institute for Neurosciences (IN), a joint center of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the Miguel Hernández University (UMH) in Elche, has revealed how a structure essential for fly flight, the haltere, is formed. This small organ, located behind the main wings, functions as a biological gyroscope that helps the insect stay stable in the air. The study, published in the journal Current Biology, was led by researcher José Carlos Pastor Pareja, head of the Cell-to-tissue architecture in the nervous system laboratory at the IN.
This work shows that, contrary to previous ...
Researchers find that, overall, prescribing ADHD medications via telehealth does not alter risk of substance use disorder
2025-06-11
Telehealth patients were not more likely to develop substance use disorder
Researchers found that a small number of people who received initial stimulant prescription via telehealth developed stimulant disorder and emphasize the importance of follow-up care
Telehealth can make health care easier to access for patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) who need treatment, but experts worry about an increased risk of substance use disorder for patients being prescribed controlled medications such as stimulants for ADHD during these appointments. Mass General Brigham researchers scrutinized this concern with the first-ever study comparing ...
How trace elements are recycled in the deep sea
2025-06-11
The oceans are full of living things, with microscopic algae (phytoplankton) at the base of the marine food chain. These organisms make a living in the same way as land plants, using the sunlight that penetrates the upper 100 meters or so of the ocean as the energy source by which they synthesise organic matter for their cells. Every year, these tiny algae make about as much organic carbon as land plants. Like land plants, they obtain the building blocks of their cells from the surrounding environment – not a soil in this case but the seawater solution they live in.
But unlike the land ecosystem, when these algae die, they fall into the dark ...
Cyborg tadpoles with soft, flexible neural implants
2025-06-11
Bioengineering researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a soft, thin, stretchable bioelectronic device that can be implanted into a tadpole embryo’s neural plate, the early-stage, flat structure that folds to become the 3D brain and spinal cord.
The researchers demonstrated that the device could integrate seamlessly into the brain as it develops and record electrical activity from single brain cells with millisecond precision, with no impact on normal tadpole embryo development or behavior.
These so-called cyborg tadpoles offer a glimpse into a future in which profound mysteries of the brain could be illuminated, ...
Have a damaged painting? Restore it in just hours with an AI-generated “mask”
2025-06-11
Art restoration takes steady hands and a discerning eye. For centuries, conservators have restored paintings by identifying areas needing repair, then mixing an exact shade to fill in one area at a time. Often, a painting can have thousands of tiny regions requiring individual attention. Restoring a single painting can take anywhere from a few weeks to over a decade.
In recent years, digital restoration tools have opened a route to creating virtual representations of original, restored works. These tools apply techniques of computer vision, image recognition, and color matching, to generate a “digitally restored” version of a painting relatively quickly.
Still, there has ...
NIST and partners use quantum mechanics to make a factory for random numbers
2025-06-11
Randomness is incredibly useful. People often draw straws, throw dice or flip coins to make fair choices. Random numbers can enable auditors to make completely unbiased selections. Randomness is also key in security; if a password or code is an unguessable string of numbers, it’s harder to crack. Many of our cryptographic systems today use random number generators to produce secure keys.
But how do you know that a random number is truly random? Classical computer algorithms can only create pseudo-random numbers, and someone with enough knowledge of the algorithm or the system could ...
New virtual reality training tool combats contamination of portable medical equipment
2025-06-11
Infection control researchers at Mass General Brigham have developed a virtual reality (VR) tool to train clinicians on core concepts in infection control, including cleaning and disinfecting portable medical equipment, to prevent the spread of infections throughout healthcare facilities. They successfully piloted the VR training tool at seven facilities across the United States, and their hope is such training can increase staff competency and improve patient safety. The work is published in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology.
“Devices ...
Scientists achieve shortest hard X-ray pulses to date
2025-06-11
MADISON — Once only a part of science fiction, lasers are now everyday objects used in research, healthcare and even just for fun. Previously available only in low-energy light, lasers are now available in wavelengths from microwaves through X-rays, opening a range of different downstream applications.
In a new study publishing June 11, 2025, in the journal Nature, an international collaboration led by scientists at the University of Wisconsin–Madison has generated the shortest hard X-ray ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Intra-arterial tenecteplase for acute stroke after successful endovascular therapy
Study reveals beneficial microbes that can sustain yields in unfertilized fields
Robotic probe quickly measures key properties of new materials
Climate change cuts milk production, even when farmers cool their cows
Frozen, but not sealed: Arctic Ocean remained open to life during ice ages
Some like it cold: Cryorhodopsins
Demystifying gut bacteria with AI
Human wellbeing on a finite planet towards 2100: new study shows humanity at a crossroads
Unlocking the hidden biodiversity of Europe’s villages
Planned hydrogen refuelling stations may lead to millions of euros in yearly losses
Planned C-sections increase the risk of certain childhood cancers
Adults who have survived childhood cancer are at increased risk of severe COVID-19
Drones reveal extreme coral mortality after bleaching
New genetic finding uncovers hidden cause of arsenic resistance in acute promyelocytic leukemia
Native habitats hold the key to the much-loved smashed avocado’s future
Using lightning to make ammonia out of thin air
Machine learning potential-driven insights into pH-dependent CO₂ reduction
Physician associates provide safe care for diagnosed patients when directly supervised by a doctor
How game-play with robots can bring out their human side
Asthma: patient expectations influence the course of the disease
UNM physician tests drug that causes nerve tissue to emit light, enabling faster, safer surgery
New study identifies EMP1 as a key driver of pancreatic cancer progression and poor prognosis
XPR1 identified as a key regulator of ovarian cancer growth through autophagy and immune evasion
Flexible, eco-friendly electronic plastic for wearable tech, sensors
Can the Large Hadron Collider snap string theory?
Stuckeman professor’s new book explores ‘socially sustainable’ architecture
Synthetic DNA nanoparticles for gene therapy
New model to find treatments for an aggressive blood cancer
Special issue of Journal of Intensive Medicine analyzes non-invasive respiratory support
T cells take aim at Chikungunya virus
[Press-News.org] Book explores how ‘domestication’ of environmentalism limits who it protectsUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign landscape architecture professor Pollyanna Rhee examines how the modern environmental movement has been used to protect the property and interests of affluent homeowners in her new book, “Natural Attachments."