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'''"Risk society"''' is a term that emerged during the 1990s to describe the manner in which modern [[society]] organizes in response to [[risk]]. The term is closely associated with several key writers on [[modernity]], in particular [[Ulrich Beck]] and [[Anthony Giddens]}.
{{Short description|Manner in which modern society organizes in response to risk}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}
<ref name=BeckRiskSociety>
{{Use Oxford spelling|date=August 2020}}
{{cite book
'''Risk society''' is the manner in which modern [[society]] organizes in response to [[risk]]. The term is closely associated with several key writers on [[modernity]], in particular [[Ulrich Beck]] and [[Anthony Giddens]].{{sfn|Beck|1992|p=260}} The term was coined in the 1980s and its popularity during the 1990s was both as a consequence of its links to trends in thinking about wider modernity, and also to its links to popular discourse, in particular the growing [[environmentalism|environmental concerns]] during the period.{{sfn|Caplan|2000|p=7}}
|author=Ulrich Beck
|title=Risk Society, Towards a New Modernity
|title_orig=[[:de:Risikogesellschaft|''Risikogesellschaft'']] published in 1986.
|translator=Mark Ritter, and with an Introduction by Scott Lash and Brian Wynne. |location=London
|publisher=Sage Publications
|year=1992
|pages=260
}}
</ref> The term's popularity during the 1990s was both as a consequence of its links to trends in thinking about wider modernity, and also to its links to popular discourse, in particular the growing [[environmentalism|environmental concerns]] during the period.<ref>Caplan, p.7.</ref>


==Definition==
==Definition==
According to sociologist [[Anthony Giddens]], a risk society is "a society increasingly preoccupied with the future (and also with safety), which generates the notion of risk,"<ref>Giddens 1999, p.3.</ref> whilst the German sociologist [[Ulrich Beck]] defines it as "a systematic way of dealing with hazards and insecurities induced and introduced by [[modernisation]] itself (Beck 1992:21)".<ref name=BeckRiskSociety />
According to the British sociologist [[Anthony Giddens]], a risk society is "a society increasingly preoccupied with the future (and also with safety), which generates the notion of risk",{{sfn|Giddens|Pierson|1998|p=209}} whilst the German sociologist [[Ulrich Beck]] defines it as "a systematic way of dealing with hazards and insecurities induced and introduced by [[modernisation]] itself".{{sfn|Beck|1992|p=21}}


Beck defined modernization as, {{quote|surges of technological rationalization and changes in work and organization, but beyond that includes much more: the change in societal characteristics and normal biographies, changes in lifestyle and forms of love, change in the structures of power and influence, in the forms of political repression and participation, in views of reality and in the norms of knowledge. In social science's understanding of modernity, the plough, the steam locomotive and the microchip are visible indicators of a much deeper process, which comprises and reshapes the entire social structure.{{sfn|Beck|1992|p=50}}}}
Beck (1992:50) <ref name=BeckRiskSociety /> defined modernization as,

{{Quote box
|quote = "surges of technological rationalization and changes in work and organization, but beyond that includes much more: the change in societal characteristics and normal biographies, changes in lifestyle and forms of love, change in the structures of power and influence, in the forms of political repression and participation, in views of reality and in the norms of knowledge. In social science's understanding of modernity, plough, the steam locomotive and the microchip are visible indicators of a much deeper process, which comprises and reshapes the entire social structure."
|width = 75%
|align = center
}}


==Background==
==Background==


===Modernity and Realism in Science===
===Modernity and realism in science===
Beck and Giddens both approach the risk society firmly from the perspective of [[modernity]], "a shorthand term for modern society or industrial civilization.&nbsp;... [M]odernity is vastly more dynamic than any previous type of social order. It is a society&nbsp;... which unlike any preceding culture lives in the future rather than the past."{{sfn|Giddens|Pierson|1998|p=94}} They also draw heavily on the concept of [[Reflexivity (social theory)|reflexivity]], the idea that as a society examines itself, it in turn changes itself in the process. In classical industrial society, the modernist view is based on assumption of realism in science creating a system in which scientists work in an exclusive, inaccessible environment of modern period.

Beck and Giddens both approach the risk society firmly from the perspective of [[modernity]], "a shorthand term for modern society or industrial civilization... modernity is vastly more dynamic than any previous type of social order. It is a society... which unlike any preceding culture lives in the future rather than the past." (Anthony Giddens)<ref>Giddens p.94.</ref> They also draw heavily on the concept of [[Reflexivity (social theory)|reflexivity]], the idea that as a society examines itself, it in turn changes itself in the process.

In classical industrial society, the modernist view is based an assumption of realism in science creating a system in which scientists work in an exclusive, inaccessible environment.


==Implications==
==Implications==


===Environmental Risks===
===Environmental risks===
In 1986, right after the [[Chernobyl disaster]], [[Ulrich Beck]], a sociology professor at the University of Munich, published the original German text, ''Risikogesellschaft'', of his highly influential and catalytic work (Suhrkamp, Frankfurt 1986). ''Risikogesellschaft'' was published in English as ''Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity'' in 1992.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Badri |first=Adarsh |date=2024-07-30 |title=Notes: Risk Society by Ulrich Beck – Adarsh Badri |url=https://adarshbadri.me/politics-society/notes-risk-society-by-ulrich-beck/ |access-date=2024-08-11 |language=en-US}}</ref> The ecological crisis is central to this social analysis of the contemporary period. Beck argued that environmental [[risk]]s had become the predominant product, not just an unpleasant, manageable side-effect, of industrial society.


[[Anthony Giddens|Giddens]] and Beck argued that whilst humans have always been subjected to a level of risk&nbsp;– such as [[natural disasters]]&nbsp;– these have usually been perceived as produced by non-human forces. Modern societies, however, are exposed to risks such as [[pollution]], newly discovered illnesses, crime, that are the result of the [[modernization]] process itself. Giddens defines these two types of risks as [[external risk]]s and [[manufactured risks]].{{sfn|Giddens|1999}} [[Manufactured risks]] are marked by a high level of [[human agency]] involved in both producing, and mitigating such risks.
In 1986 in the aftermath of the [[Chernobyl disaster]], the world's worst nuclear accident,<ref>{{cite news
|author=BBC
|date=12 June 2007
|title=The Chernobyl disaster: 20 years on
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456957/html/nn1page1.stm
|accessdate=July 15, 2012
}}
</ref> Ulrich Beck, a sociology professor at the University of Munich, wrote the original German text, ''Risikogesellschaft'', of his highly influential and catalytic work. Risikogesellschaft was published in English as ''Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity'' in 1992. The ecological crisis is central to this thought-provoking social analysis of the contemporary period. Beck argued that environmental risks had become the predominant product, not just an unpleasant, manageable side-effect, of industrial society.


As [[manufactured risks]] are the product of human activity, authors like Giddens and Beck argue that it is possible for societies to assess the level of risk that is being produced, or that is about to be produced. This sort of reflexive introspection can in turn alter the planned activities themselves. As an example, due to disasters such as [[Chernobyl]] and the [[Love Canal]] Crisis, public faith in the modern project has declined leaving public distrust in [[Industrial sector|industry]], [[government]] and [[expert]]s.{{sfn|Giddens|1990}}
Giddens and Beck argued that whilst humans have always been subjected to a level of risk - such as [[natural disasters]] - these have usually been perceived as produced by non-human forces. Modern societies, however, are exposed to risks such as pollution, newly discovered illnesses, crime, that are the result of the [[modernization]] process itself. Giddens defines these two types of risks as [[external risk]]s and [[manufactured risks]].<ref>Giddens, 1999.</ref> [[Manufactured risks]] are marked by a high level of [[human agency]] involved in both producing, and mitigating such risks.


Social concerns led to increased regulation of the nuclear power industry and to the abandonment of some expansion plans, altering the course of modernization itself. This increased critique of modern industrial practices is said to have resulted in a state of [[reflexive modernization]], illustrated by concepts such as [[sustainability]] and the [[precautionary principle]] that focus on preventive measures to decrease levels of risk.
As [[manufactured risks]] are the product of human activity, authors like Giddens and Beck argue that it is possible for societies to assess the level of risk that is being produced, or that is about to be produced. This sort of reflexive introspection can in turn alter the planned activities themselves. As an example, disasters such as [[Chernobyl]] and the [[Love Canal]] Crisis, public faith in the modern project has declined (a claim that has not been independently verified within all population groups{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}) leaving public distrust in [[industry]], [[government]] and [[expert]]s.
<ref>Giddens, 1990.</ref>


There are differing opinions as to how the concept of a risk society interacts with social hierarchies and class distinctions.{{sfn|Caplan|2000|p=6}} Most agree that social relations have altered with the introduction of manufactured risks and reflexive modernization. Risks, much like [[wealth]], are distributed unevenly in a population and will influence quality of life.
Social concerns led to increased regulation of the nuclear power industry and to the abandonment of some expansion plans, altering the course of modernization itself. This increased critique of modern industrial practices is said to have resulted in a state of [[reflexive modernization]], illustrated by concepts such as [[sustainability]] and the [[precautionary principle]] that focus on preventative measures to decrease levels of risk.


Beck has argued that older forms of class structure&nbsp;– based mainly on the accumulation of wealth&nbsp;– atrophy in a modern, risk society, in which people occupy [[social risk positions]] that are achieved through risk aversion. "In some of their dimensions these follow the inequalities of class and strata positions, but they bring a fundamentally different distribution logic into play".{{sfn|Beck|1992|p=23}} Beck contends that widespread risks contain a "boomerang effect", in that individuals producing risks will also be exposed to them. This argument suggests that wealthy individuals whose [[Capital (economics)|capital]] is largely responsible for creating pollution will also have to suffer when, for example, the contaminants seep into the water supply. This argument may seem oversimplified, as wealthy people may have the ability to mitigate risk more easily by, for example, buying bottled water. Beck, however, has argued that the distribution of this sort of risk is the result of [[knowledge]], rather than wealth. Whilst the wealthy person may have access to [[factors of production|resources]] that enable him or her to avert risk, this would not even be an option were the person unaware that the risk even existed. However, risks do not only affect those of a certain social class or place, as risk is not missed and can affect everyone regardless of societal class; no one is free from risk.{{sfn|Beck|1992}}
There are differing opinions as to how the concept of a risk society interacts with social hierarchies and class distinctions.<ref>Caplan, p.6.</ref> Most agree that social relations have altered with the introduction of manufactured risks and reflexive modernization. [[Risk]]s, much like [[wealth]], are distributed unevenly in a population and will influence quality of life.


By contrast, Giddens has argued that older forms of class structure maintain a somewhat stronger role in a risk society, now being partly defined "in terms of differential access to forms of self-actualization and empowerment".{{sfn|Giddens|1991|p=6}} Giddens has also tended to approach the concept of a risk society more positively than Beck, suggesting that there "can be no question of merely taking a negative attitude towards risk. Risk needs to be disciplined, but active risk-taking is a core element of a dynamic economy and an innovative society."{{sfn|Giddens|2002|p=35}}
[[Ulrich Beck|Beck]] has argued that older forms of class structure - based mainly on the accumulation of wealth - atrophy in a modern, risk society, in which people occupy [[social risk positions]] that are achieved through risk aversion. "In some of their dimensions these follow the inequalities of class and strata positions, but they bring a fundamentally different distribution logic into play".<ref>Beck, p.23.</ref> Beck contends that widespread risks contain a 'boomerang effect', in that individuals producing risks will also be exposed to them. This argument suggests that wealthy individuals whose [[Capital (economics)|capital]] is largely responsible for creating [[pollution]] will also have to suffer when, for example, the contaminants seep into the water supply. This argument may seem oversimplified, as wealthy people may have the ability to mitigate risk more easily by, for example, buying bottled water. [[Ulrich Beck|Beck]], however, has argued that the distribution of this sort of risk is the result of [[knowledge]], rather than wealth. Whilst the wealthy person may have access to [[factors of production|resources]] that enable him or her to avert risk, this would not even be an option were the person unaware that the risk even existed.

By contrast, [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens]] has argued that older forms of class structure maintain a somewhat stronger role in a risk society, now being partly defined "in terms of differential access to forms of self-actualization and empowerment".<ref>Giddens 1991, p. 6.</ref> [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens]] has also tended to approach the concept of a risk society more positively than [[Ulrich Beck|Beck]], suggesting that there "can be no question of merely taking a negative attitude towards risk. Risk needs to be disciplined, but active risk-taking is a core element of a dynamic economic and an innovative society."<ref>Giddens, ''Runaway World'', 1999, p.29.</ref>

==Notes==
{{reflist}}


==References==
==References==
===Footnotes===
* Caplan, Pat 'Introduction: Risk Revisited' in Caplan, Pat (ed) 'Risk Revisited', Pluto Press: London (2000).
{{reflist|22em}}
* Ericson, R.V. & K. Haggerty. 1997. ''Policing the Risk Society.'' Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
* [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens, Anthony]] (1990) ''Consequences of Modernity''. Cambridge: Polity Press.
* [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens, Anthony]] (1991) ''Modernity and Self-Identity. Self and Society in the Late Modern Age''. Cambridge: .
* Giddens, Anthony (1998) ''The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy''. Cambridge : Polity.
* [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens, Anthony]] (1999) “Risk and Responsibility” ''Modern Law Review'' 62(1): 1-10.
* [[Anthony Giddens|Giddens, Anthony]] (1999) ''Runaway World: How Globalization is Reshaping Our Lives''. London : Profile.
* [[Ulrich Beck]] (1992) ''Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity''. New Delhi: Sage. (Translated from the German [[:de:Risikogesellschaft|''Risikogesellschaft'']] 1986.


==External links==
===Bibliography===
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}}
* Leiss, W. [http://www.ualberta.ca/~cjscopy/articles/leiss.html Ulrich Beck, Risk Society, Towards a New Modernity]. Featured Book Reviews. ''Canadian Journal of Sociology,'' Online edition.
* {{cite book
|last=Beck
|first=Ulrich
|author-link=Ulrich Beck
|year=1992
|title=Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity
|translator-last=Ritter
|translator-first=Mark
|location=London
|publisher=Sage Publications
|isbn=978-0-8039-8346-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Caplan
|first=Pat
|author-link=Pat Caplan
|year=2000
|chapter=Introduction: Risk Revisited
|editor-last=Caplan
|editor-first=Pat
|editor-link=Pat Caplan
|title=Risk Revisited
|location=London
|publisher=Pluto Press
|pages=1–28
|isbn=978-0-7453-1463-1
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Giddens
|first=Anthony
|author-link=Anthony Giddens
|year=1990
|title=Consequences of Modernity
|location=Cambridge, England
|publisher=Polity Press
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Giddens
|first=Anthony
|author-link=Anthony Giddens
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=1991
|title=Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age
|location=Cambridge, England
|publisher=Polity Press
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Giddens
|first=Anthony
|author-link=Anthony Giddens
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=1998
|title=The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy
|location=Cambridge, England
|publisher=Polity Press
}}
* {{cite journal
|last=Giddens
|first=Anthony
|author-link=Anthony Giddens
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=1999
|title=Risk and Responsibility
|journal=Modern Law Review
|volume=62
|issue=1
|pages=1–10
|doi=10.1111/1468-2230.00188
|issn=1468-2230
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Giddens
|first=Anthony
|author-link=Anthony Giddens
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=2002
|title=Runaway World: How Globalization Is Reshaping Our Lives
|edition=2nd
|location=London
|publisher=Profile Books
|isbn=978-1-86197-429-7
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Giddens
|first1=Anthony
|author1-link=Anthony Giddens
|last2=Pierson
|first2=Christopher
|year=1998
|title=Making Sense of Modernity: Conversations with Anthony Giddens
}}
{{refend}}


==Further reading==
[[Category:Society]]
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}}
[[Category:Social philosophy]]
* {{cite book
|last1=Ericson
|first1=Richard V.
|last2=Haggerty
|first2=Kevin D.
|year=1997
|title=Policing the Risk Society
|location=Toronto
|publisher=University of Toronto Press
|doi=10.3138/9781442678590
|isbn=978-1-4426-7859-0
|jstor=10.3138/9781442678590
}}
* {{cite journal
|last=Leiss
|first=William
|author-link=William Leiss
|year=
|title=Review of ''Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity'', by Ulrich Beck
|url=https://sites.ualberta.ca/~cjscopy/articles/leiss.html
|department=Featured Book Reviews
|journal=Canadian Journal of Sociology
|edition=online
|access-date=18 August 2020
}}
{{refend}}

[[Category:Modernity]]
[[Category:Risk]]
[[Category:Risk]]
[[Category:Social philosophy]]
[[Category:Social concepts]]
[[Category:Books in philosophy of technology]]
[[Category:Philosophy of technology]]


[[ar:المجتمع خطر]]
[[zh-min-nan:Hong-hiám siā-hoē]]
[[de:Risikogesellschaft]]
[[et:Riskiühiskond]]
[[es:Sociedad del riesgo]]
[[eo:Riska socio]]
[[is:Áhættusamfélag]]
[[he:אולריך בק#חברת הסיכון]]
[[he:אולריך בק#חברת הסיכון]]
[[nl:Risikogesellschaft]]
[[pl:Społeczeństwo ryzyka]]
[[sv:Risksamhälle]]

Latest revision as of 01:29, 29 September 2024

Risk society is the manner in which modern society organizes in response to risk. The term is closely associated with several key writers on modernity, in particular Ulrich Beck and Anthony Giddens.[1] The term was coined in the 1980s and its popularity during the 1990s was both as a consequence of its links to trends in thinking about wider modernity, and also to its links to popular discourse, in particular the growing environmental concerns during the period.[2]

Definition

[edit]

According to the British sociologist Anthony Giddens, a risk society is "a society increasingly preoccupied with the future (and also with safety), which generates the notion of risk",[3] whilst the German sociologist Ulrich Beck defines it as "a systematic way of dealing with hazards and insecurities induced and introduced by modernisation itself".[4]

Beck defined modernization as,

surges of technological rationalization and changes in work and organization, but beyond that includes much more: the change in societal characteristics and normal biographies, changes in lifestyle and forms of love, change in the structures of power and influence, in the forms of political repression and participation, in views of reality and in the norms of knowledge. In social science's understanding of modernity, the plough, the steam locomotive and the microchip are visible indicators of a much deeper process, which comprises and reshapes the entire social structure.[5]

Background

[edit]

Modernity and realism in science

[edit]

Beck and Giddens both approach the risk society firmly from the perspective of modernity, "a shorthand term for modern society or industrial civilization. ... [M]odernity is vastly more dynamic than any previous type of social order. It is a society ... which unlike any preceding culture lives in the future rather than the past."[6] They also draw heavily on the concept of reflexivity, the idea that as a society examines itself, it in turn changes itself in the process. In classical industrial society, the modernist view is based on assumption of realism in science creating a system in which scientists work in an exclusive, inaccessible environment of modern period.

Implications

[edit]

Environmental risks

[edit]

In 1986, right after the Chernobyl disaster, Ulrich Beck, a sociology professor at the University of Munich, published the original German text, Risikogesellschaft, of his highly influential and catalytic work (Suhrkamp, Frankfurt 1986). Risikogesellschaft was published in English as Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity in 1992.[7] The ecological crisis is central to this social analysis of the contemporary period. Beck argued that environmental risks had become the predominant product, not just an unpleasant, manageable side-effect, of industrial society.

Giddens and Beck argued that whilst humans have always been subjected to a level of risk – such as natural disasters – these have usually been perceived as produced by non-human forces. Modern societies, however, are exposed to risks such as pollution, newly discovered illnesses, crime, that are the result of the modernization process itself. Giddens defines these two types of risks as external risks and manufactured risks.[8] Manufactured risks are marked by a high level of human agency involved in both producing, and mitigating such risks.

As manufactured risks are the product of human activity, authors like Giddens and Beck argue that it is possible for societies to assess the level of risk that is being produced, or that is about to be produced. This sort of reflexive introspection can in turn alter the planned activities themselves. As an example, due to disasters such as Chernobyl and the Love Canal Crisis, public faith in the modern project has declined leaving public distrust in industry, government and experts.[9]

Social concerns led to increased regulation of the nuclear power industry and to the abandonment of some expansion plans, altering the course of modernization itself. This increased critique of modern industrial practices is said to have resulted in a state of reflexive modernization, illustrated by concepts such as sustainability and the precautionary principle that focus on preventive measures to decrease levels of risk.

There are differing opinions as to how the concept of a risk society interacts with social hierarchies and class distinctions.[10] Most agree that social relations have altered with the introduction of manufactured risks and reflexive modernization. Risks, much like wealth, are distributed unevenly in a population and will influence quality of life.

Beck has argued that older forms of class structure – based mainly on the accumulation of wealth – atrophy in a modern, risk society, in which people occupy social risk positions that are achieved through risk aversion. "In some of their dimensions these follow the inequalities of class and strata positions, but they bring a fundamentally different distribution logic into play".[11] Beck contends that widespread risks contain a "boomerang effect", in that individuals producing risks will also be exposed to them. This argument suggests that wealthy individuals whose capital is largely responsible for creating pollution will also have to suffer when, for example, the contaminants seep into the water supply. This argument may seem oversimplified, as wealthy people may have the ability to mitigate risk more easily by, for example, buying bottled water. Beck, however, has argued that the distribution of this sort of risk is the result of knowledge, rather than wealth. Whilst the wealthy person may have access to resources that enable him or her to avert risk, this would not even be an option were the person unaware that the risk even existed. However, risks do not only affect those of a certain social class or place, as risk is not missed and can affect everyone regardless of societal class; no one is free from risk.[12]

By contrast, Giddens has argued that older forms of class structure maintain a somewhat stronger role in a risk society, now being partly defined "in terms of differential access to forms of self-actualization and empowerment".[13] Giddens has also tended to approach the concept of a risk society more positively than Beck, suggesting that there "can be no question of merely taking a negative attitude towards risk. Risk needs to be disciplined, but active risk-taking is a core element of a dynamic economy and an innovative society."[14]

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Beck 1992, p. 260.
  2. ^ Caplan 2000, p. 7.
  3. ^ Giddens & Pierson 1998, p. 209.
  4. ^ Beck 1992, p. 21.
  5. ^ Beck 1992, p. 50.
  6. ^ Giddens & Pierson 1998, p. 94.
  7. ^ Badri, Adarsh (30 July 2024). "Notes: Risk Society by Ulrich Beck – Adarsh Badri". Retrieved 11 August 2024.
  8. ^ Giddens 1999.
  9. ^ Giddens 1990.
  10. ^ Caplan 2000, p. 6.
  11. ^ Beck 1992, p. 23.
  12. ^ Beck 1992.
  13. ^ Giddens 1991, p. 6.
  14. ^ Giddens 2002, p. 35.

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]