TITLE:
Qualifying the Boom-Bust Paradigm: An Examination of the Off-Shore Oil and Gas Industry
AUTHORS:
Timothy C. Brown, William B. Bankston, Craig J. Forsyth, Emily R. Berthelot
KEYWORDS:
Social Change, Boom-Town Model, Social Impact Assessment, Oil and Gas, Qualitative Research
JOURNAL NAME:
Sociology Mind,
Vol.1 No.3,
July
12,
2011
ABSTRACT: The oil industry is seen as being similar to other mining activities in having a cycle of expansion and subsequent contraction. Previous literature suggests this cycle leads to boomtown communities. Furthermore, the oil and gas industry is often seen as a having primarily negative social effects on the communities it invades. The present research takes an in-depth look at the small South Louisiana community of St. Mary Parish; an area with eco-nomic roots in such extraction enterprises as lumber, fishing and later, oil. Positive attributes of the presence of the oil and gas industry are identified, namely-sustainability and increased life chances of local residents. Due to methodological limitations previous research might have been unable to holistically view the off-shore oil in-dustries impacts on communities. This paper concludes that the paradigmatic usage of the NEPA boomtown model is inapt for the study of the Gulf off-shore oil industry.