Ulrich Beck (1944–2015) stands as one of the most influential late-modern sociologists whose work reshaped how we understand modernity, globalization, and the new kinds of uncertainties produced by contemporary life. His central contribution is the idea of the Risk Society —a framework that explains how modern societies are increasingly preoccupied with managing risks that they themselves have created. Background and Intellectual Context Beck’s ideas emerged during the late 20th century, a period marked by rapid technological advancement, environmental concerns, industrial accidents (like Chernobyl and Bhopal), globalization, and the erosion of traditional social structures. He was responding to: The limits of classical industrial society, The rise of global ecological threats, The growing complexity of technological systems, A shift from class-based problems to risk-driven anxieties. This context shaped his critique of modernity and his proposal of a “second modernit...