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Environmental history

Environmental history is the study of human interaction with the natural world over time, emphasising the active role nature plays in influencing human affairs and vice versa.

The city of Machu Picchu was constructed c. 1450 AD, at the height of the Inca Empire. It has commanding views down two valleys and a nearly impassable mountain at its back. There is an ample supply of spring water and enough land for a plentiful food supply. The hillsides leading to it have been terraced to provide farmland for crops, reduce soil erosion, protect against landslides, and create steep slopes to discourage potential invaders.

Environmental history first emerged in the United States out of the environmental movement of the 1960s and 1970s, and much of its impetus still stems from present-day global environmental concerns.[1] The field was founded on conservation issues but has broadened in scope to include more general social and scientific history and may deal with cities, population or sustainable development. As all history occurs in the natural world, environmental history tends to focus on particular time-scales, geographic regions, or key themes. It is also a strongly multidisciplinary subject that draws widely on both the humanities and natural science.

The subject matter of environmental history can be divided into three main components.[2] The first, nature itself and its change over time, includes the physical impact of humans on the Earth's land, water, atmosphere and biosphere. The second category, how humans use nature, includes the environmental consequences of increasing population, more effective technology and changing patterns of production and consumption. Other key themes are the transition from nomadic hunter-gatherer communities to settled agriculture in the neolithic revolution, the effects of colonial expansion and settlements, and the environmental and human consequences of the industrial and technological revolutions.[3] Finally, environmental historians study how people think about nature – the way attitudes, beliefs and values influence interaction with nature, especially in the form of myths, religion and science.

Origin of name and early works edit

In 1967, Roderick Nash published Wilderness and the American Mind, a work that has become a classic text of early environmental history. In an address to the Organization of American Historians in 1969 (published in 1970) Nash used the expression "environmental history",[4] although 1972 is generally taken as the date when the term was first coined.[5] The 1959 book by Samuel P. Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement, 1890–1920, while being a major contribution to American political history, is now also regarded as a founding document in the field of environmental history. Hays is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Pittsburgh.[6] Alfred W. Crosby's book The Columbian Exchange (1972) is another key early work of environmental history.[7]

Historiography edit

Brief overviews of the historiography of environmental history have been published by J. R. McNeill,[8] Richard White,[9] and J. Donald Hughes.[10] In 2014 Oxford University Press published a volume of 25 essays in The Oxford Handbook of Environmental History.

Definition edit

There is no universally accepted definition of environmental history. In general terms it is a history that tries to explain why our environment is like it is and how humanity has influenced its current condition, as well as commenting on the problems and opportunities of tomorrow.[11] Donald Worster's widely quoted 1988 definition states that environmental history is the "interaction between human cultures and the environment in the past".[12]

In 2001, J. Donald Hughes defined the subject as the "study of human relationships through time with the natural communities of which they are a part in order to explain the processes of change that affect that relationship".[13] and, in 2006, as "history that seeks understanding of human beings as they have lived, worked and thought in relationship to the rest of nature through the changes brought by time".[14] "As a method, environmental history is the use of ecological analysis as a means of understanding human history...an account of changes in human societies as they relate to changes in the natural environment".[13] Environmental historians are also interested in "what people think about nature, and how they have expressed those ideas in folk religions, popular culture, literature and art".[13] In 2003, J. R. McNeill defined it as "the history of the mutual relations between humankind and the rest of nature".[8]

Subject matter edit

Traditional historical analysis has over time extended its range of study from the activities and influence of a few significant people to a much broader social, political, economic, and cultural analysis. Environmental history further broadens the subject matter of conventional history. In 1988, Donald Worster stated that environmental history "attempts to make history more inclusive in its narratives"[15] by examining the "role and place of nature in human life",[16] and in 1993, that "Environmental history explores the ways in which the biophysical world has influenced the course of human history and the ways in which people have thought about and tried to transform their surroundings".[17] The interdependency of human and environmental factors in the creation of landscapes is expressed through the notion of the cultural landscape. Worster also questioned the scope of the discipline, asking: "We study humans and nature; therefore can anything human or natural be outside our enquiry?"[18]

Environmental history is generally treated as a subfield of history. But some environmental historians challenge this assumption, arguing that while traditional history is human history – the story of people and their institutions,[19] "humans cannot place themselves outside the principles of nature".[20] In this sense, they argue that environmental history is a version of human history within a larger context, one less dependent on anthropocentrism (even though anthropogenic change is at the center of its narrative).[21]

Dimensions edit

 
General view of Funkville in 1864, Oil Creek, Pennsylvania, US

J. Donald Hughes responded to the view that environmental history is "light on theory" or lacking theoretical structure by viewing the subject through the lens of three "dimensions": nature and culture, history and science, and scale.[22] This advances beyond Worster's recognition of three broad clusters of issues to be addressed by environmental historians although both historians recognize that the emphasis of their categories might vary according to the particular study[23] as, clearly, some studies will concentrate more on society and human affairs and others more on the environment.

Themes edit

Several themes are used to express these historical dimensions. A more traditional historical approach is to analyse the transformation of the globe's ecology through themes like the separation of man from nature during the neolithic revolution, imperialism and colonial expansion, exploration, agricultural change, the effects of the industrial and technological revolution, and urban expansion. More environmental topics include human impact through influences on forestry, fire, climate change, sustainability and so on. According to Paul Warde, "the increasingly sophisticated history of colonization and migration can take on an environmental aspect, tracing the pathways of ideas and species around the globe and indeed is bringing about an increased use of such analogies and 'colonial' understandings of processes within European history."[24] The importance of the colonial enterprise in Africa, the Caribbean and Indian Ocean has been detailed by Richard Grove.[3] Much of the literature consists of case-studies targeted at the global, national and local levels.[25]

Scale edit

Although environmental history can cover billions of years of history over the whole Earth, it can equally concern itself with local scales and brief time periods.[26] Many environmental historians are occupied with local, regional and national histories.[27] Some historians link their subject exclusively to the span of human history – "every time period in human history"[20] while others include the period before human presence on Earth as a legitimate part of the discipline. Ian Simmons's Environmental History of Great Britain covers a period of about 10,000 years. There is a tendency to difference in time scales between natural and social phenomena: the causes of environmental change that stretch back in time may be dealt with socially over a comparatively brief period.[28]

Although at all times environmental influences have extended beyond particular geographic regions and cultures, during the 20th and early 21st centuries anthropogenic environmental change has assumed global proportions, most prominently with climate change but also as a result of settlement, the spread of disease and the globalization of world trade.[29]

History edit

 
Nature preservationist John Muir with U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt (left) on Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park

The questions of environmental history date back to antiquity, including[30] Hippocrates, the father of medicine, who asserted that different cultures and human temperaments could be related to the surroundings in which peoples lived in Airs, Waters, Places.[31] Scholars as varied as Ibn Khaldun and Montesquieu found climate to be a key determinant of human behavior.[32] During the Enlightenment, there was a rising awareness of the environment and scientists addressed themes of sustainability via natural history and medicine.[33] However, the origins of the subject in its present form are generally traced to the 20th century.

In 1929 a group of French historians founded the journal Annales, in many ways a forerunner of modern environmental history since it took as its subject matter the reciprocal global influences of the environment and human society. The idea of the impact of the physical environment on civilizations was espoused by this Annales School to describe the long term developments that shape human history[18] by focusing away from political and intellectual history, toward agriculture, demography, and geography. Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, a pupil of the Annales School, was the first to really embrace, in the 1950s, environmental history in a more contemporary form.[34] One of the most influential members of the Annales School was Lucien Febvre (1878–1956), whose 1922 book A Geographical Introduction to History is now a classic in the field.

The most influential empirical and theoretical work in the subject has been done in the United States where teaching programs first emerged and a generation of trained environmental historians is now active.[24] In the United States environmental history as an independent field of study emerged in the general cultural reassessment and reform of the 1960s and 1970s along with environmentalism, "conservation history",[35] and a gathering awareness of the global scale of some environmental issues. This was in large part a reaction to the way nature was represented in history at the time, which "portrayed the advance of culture and technology as releasing humans from dependence on the natural world and providing them with the means to manage it [and] celebrated human mastery over other forms of life and the natural environment, and expected technological improvement and economic growth to accelerate".[36] Environmental historians intended to develop a post-colonial historiography that was "more inclusive in its narratives".[15]

Moral and political inspiration edit

Moral and political inspiration to environmental historians has come from American writers and activists such as Henry Thoreau, John Muir, Aldo Leopold, and Rachel Carson. Environmental history "frequently promoted a moral and political agenda although it steadily became a more scholarly enterprise".[15] Early attempts to define the field were made in the United States by Roderick Nash in "The State of Environmental History" and in other works by frontier historians Frederick Jackson Turner, James Malin, and Walter Prescott Webb, who analyzed the process of settlement. Their work was expanded by a second generation of more specialized environmental historians such as Alfred Crosby, Samuel P. Hays, Donald Worster, William Cronon, Richard White, Carolyn Merchant, J. R. McNeill, Donald Hughes, and Chad Montrie in the United States and Paul Warde, Sverker Sorlin, Robert A. Lambert, T.C. Smout, and Peter Coates in Europe.

British Empire edit

Although environmental history was growing rapidly as a field after 1970 in the United States, it only reached historians of the British Empire in the 1990s.[37][38][39] Gregory Barton argues that the concept of environmentalism emerged from forestry studies, and emphasizes the British imperial role in that research. He argues that imperial forestry movement in India around 1900 included government reservations, new methods of fire protection, and attention to revenue-producing forest management. The result eased the fight between romantic preservationists and laissez-faire businessmen, thus giving the compromise from which modern environmentalism emerged.[40]

In recent years numerous scholars cited by James Beattie have examined the environmental impact of the Empire.[41] Beinart and Hughes argue that the discovery and commercial or scientific use of new plants was an important concern in the 18th and 19th centuries. The efficient use of rivers through dams and irrigation projects was an expensive but important method of raising agricultural productivity. Searching for more efficient ways of using natural resources, the British moved flora, fauna and commodities around the world, sometimes resulting in ecological disruption and radical environmental change. Imperialism also stimulated more modern attitudes toward nature and subsidized botany and agricultural research.[42] Scholars have used the British Empire to examine the utility of the new concept of eco-cultural networks as a lens for examining interconnected, wide-ranging social and environmental processes.[43]

Current practice edit

 
Frontier historian
Frederick Jackson Turner (1861–1932)

In the United States the American Society for Environmental History was founded in 1977 while the first institute devoted specifically to environmental history in Europe was established in 1991, based at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. In 1986, the Dutch foundation for the history of environment and hygiene Net Werk was founded and publishes four newsletters per year. In the UK the White Horse Press in Cambridge has, since 1995, published the journal Environment and History which aims to bring scholars in the humanities and biological sciences closer together in constructing long and well-founded perspectives on present day environmental problems and a similar publication Tijdschrift voor Ecologische Geschiedenis (Journal for Environmental History) is a combined Flemish-Dutch initiative mainly dealing with topics in the Netherlands and Belgium although it also has an interest in European environmental history. Each issue contains abstracts in English, French and German. In 1999 the Journal was converted into a yearbook for environmental history. In Canada the Network in Canadian History and Environment facilitates the growth of environmental history through numerous workshops and a significant digital infrastructure including their website and podcast.[44]

Communication between European nations is restricted by language difficulties. In April 1999 a meeting was held in Germany to overcome these problems and to co-ordinate environmental history in Europe. This meeting resulted in the creation of the European Society for Environmental History in 1999. Only two years after its establishment, ESEH held its first international conference in St. Andrews, Scotland. Around 120 scholars attended the meeting and 105 papers were presented on topics covering the whole spectrum of environmental history. The conference showed that environmental history is a viable and lively field in Europe and since then ESEH has expanded to over 400 members and continues to grow and attracted international conferences in 2003 and 2005. In 1999 the Centre for Environmental History was established at the University of Stirling. Some history departments at European universities are now offering introductory courses in environmental history and postgraduate courses in Environmental history have been established at the Universities of Nottingham, Stirling and Dundee and more recently a Graduierten Kolleg was created at the University of Göttingen in Germany.[45] In 2009, the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society (RCC), an international, interdisciplinary center for research and education in the environmental humanities and social sciences, was founded as a joint initiative of Munich's Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität and the Deutsches Museum, with the generous support of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research.[46] The Environment & Society Portal (environmentandsociety.org) is the Rachel Carson Center's open access digital archive and publication platform.[47]

Related disciplines edit

Environmental history prides itself in bridging the gap between the arts and natural sciences although to date the scales weigh on the side of science. A definitive list of related subjects would be lengthy indeed and singling out those for special mention a difficult task. However, those frequently quoted include, historical geography, the history and philosophy of science, history of technology and climate science. On the biological side there is, above all, ecology and historical ecology, but also forestry and especially forest history, archaeology and anthropology. When the subject engages in environmental advocacy it has much in common with environmentalism.

With increasing globalization and the impact of global trade on resource distribution, concern over never-ending economic growth and the many human inequities environmental history is now gaining allies in the fields of ecological and environmental economics.[48][49]

Engagement with sociological thinkers and the humanities is limited but cannot be ignored through the beliefs and ideas that guide human action. This has been seen as the reason for a perceived lack of support from traditional historians.[24]

Issues edit

The subject has a number of areas of lively debate. These include discussion concerning: what subject matter is most appropriate; whether environmental advocacy can detract from scholarly objectivity; standards of professionalism in a subject where much outstanding work has been done by non-historians; the relative contribution of nature and humans in determining the passage of history; the degree of connection with, and acceptance by, other disciplines – but especially mainstream history. For Paul Warde the sheer scale, scope and diffuseness of the environmental history endeavour calls for an analytical toolkit "a range of common issues and questions to push forward collectively" and a "core problem". He sees a lack of "human agency" in its texts and suggest it be written more to act: as of information for environmental scientists; incorporation of the notion of risk; a closer analysis of what it is we mean by "environment"; confronting the way environmental history is at odds with the humanities because it emphasises the division between "materialist, and cultural or constructivist explanations for human behaviour".[50]

Global sustainability edit

 
Achieving sustainability will enable the Earth to continue supporting human life as we know it. Blue Marble NASA composite images: 2001 (left), 2002 (right)

Many of the themes of environmental history inevitably examine the circumstances that produced the environmental problems of the present day, a litany of themes that challenge global sustainability including: population, consumerism and materialism, climate change, waste disposal, deforestation and loss of wilderness, industrial agriculture, species extinction, depletion of natural resources, invasive organisms and urban development.[51] The simple message of sustainable use of renewable resources is frequently repeated and early as 1864 George Perkins Marsh was pointing out that the changes we make in the environment may later reduce the environments usefulness to humans so any changes should be made with great care[52] – what we would nowadays call enlightened self-interest. Richard Grove has pointed out that "States will act to prevent environmental degradation only when their economic interests are threatened".[53]

Advocacy edit

It is not clear whether environmental history should promote a moral or political agenda. The strong emotions raised by environmentalism, conservation and sustainability can interfere with historical objectivity: polemical tracts and strong advocacy can compromise objectivity and professionalism. Engagement with the political process certainly has its academic perils[54] although accuracy and commitment to the historical method is not necessarily threatened by environmental involvement: environmental historians have a reasonable expectation that their work will inform policy-makers.[55]

A recent historiographical shift has placed an increased emphasis on inequality as an element of environmental history. Imbalances of power in resources, industry, and politics have resulted in the burden of industrial pollution being shifted to less powerful populations in both the geographic and social spheres.[56] A critical examination of the traditional environmentalist movement from this historical perspective notes the ways in which early advocates of environmentalism sought the aesthetic preservation of middle-class spaces and sheltered their own communities from the worst effects of air and water pollution, while neglecting the plight of the less privileged.

Communities with less economic and sociopolitical power often lack the resources to get involved in environmental advocacy. Environmental history increasingly highlights the ways in which the middle-class environmental movement has fallen short and left behind entire communities. Interdisciplinary research now understands historic inequality as a lens through which to predict future social developments in the environmental sphere, particularly with regard to climate change. The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs cautions that a warming planet will exacerbate environmental and other inequalities, particularly with regard to: "(a) increase in the exposure of the disadvantaged groups to the adverse effects of climate change; (b) increase in their susceptibility to damage caused by climate change; and (c) decrease in their ability to cope and recover from the damage suffered."[57] As an interdisciplinary field that encompasses a new understanding of social justice dynamics in a rapidly changing global climate, environmental history is inherently advocative.

Declensionist narratives edit

Narratives of environmental history tend to be what scholars call "declensionist", that is, accounts of increasing decline under human activity.[58] In other words, "declensionist" history is a form of the "lost golden age" narrative that has repeated appeared in human thought since ancient times.[59]

Presentism and culpability edit

Under the accusation of "presentism" it is sometimes claimed that, with its genesis in the late 20th century environmentalism and conservation issues, environmental history is simply a reaction to contemporary problems, an "attempt to read late twentieth century developments and concerns back into past historical periods in which they were not operative, and certainly not conscious to human participants during those times".[60] This is strongly related to the idea of culpability. In environmental debate blame can always be apportioned, but it is more constructive for the future to understand the values and imperatives of the period under discussion so that causes are determined and the context explained.[61]

Environmental determinism edit

 
Ploughing farmer in ancient Egypt. Mural in the burial chamber of artisan Sennedjem c. 1200 BCE

For some environmental historians "the general conditions of the environment, the scale and arrangement of land and sea, the availability of resources, and the presence or absence of animals available for domestication, and associated organisms and disease vectors, that makes the development of human cultures possible and even predispose the direction of their development"[62] and that "history is inevitably guided by forces that are not of human origin or subject to human choice".[63] This approach has been attributed to American environmental historians Webb and Turner[64] and, more recently to Jared Diamond in his book Guns, Germs, and Steel, where the presence or absence of disease vectors and resources such as plants and animals that are amenable to domestication that may not only stimulate the development of human culture but even determine, to some extent, the direction of that development. The claim that the path of history has been forged by environmental rather than cultural forces is referred to as environmental determinism while, at the other extreme, is what may be called cultural determinism. An example of cultural determinism would be the view that human influence is so pervasive that the idea of pristine nature has little validity – that there is no way of relating to nature without culture.[65]

Methodology edit

 
Recording historical events

Useful guidance on the process of doing environmental history has been given by Donald Worster,[66] Carolyn Merchant,[67] William Cronon[68] and Ian Simmons.[69] Worster's three core subject areas (the environment itself, human impacts on the environment, and human thought about the environment) are generally taken as a starting point for the student as they encompass many of the different skills required. The tools are those of both history and science with a requirement for fluency in the language of natural science and especially ecology.[70] In fact methodologies and insights from a range of physical and social sciences is required, there seeming to be universal agreement that environmental history is indeed a multidisciplinary subject.

Some key works edit

  • Chakrabarti, Ranjan (ed), Does Environmental History Matter: Shikar, Subsistence, Sustenance and the Sciences (Kolkata: Readers Service, 2006)
  • Chakrabarti, Ranjan (ed.), Situating Environmental History (New Delhi: Manohar, 2007)
  • Cronon, William (ed), Uncommon Ground: Toward Reinventing Nature (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1995)
  • Dunlap, Thomas R., Nature and the English Diaspora: Environment and History in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand . (New York/Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999)
  • Glacken, Clarence, Traces on the Rhodian Shore: Nature and Culture in Western Thought From Ancient Times to the End of the Nineteenth Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967)
  • Griffiths, Tom and Libby Robin (eds.), Ecology and Empire: The Environmental History of Settler Societies. (Keele: Keele University Press, 1997)
  • Grove, Richard, Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860. (Cambridge University Press, 1995)
  • Headrick, Daniel, Humans Versus Nature: A Global Environmental History. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2020)
  • Hughes, J.D., An Environmental History of the World: Humankind's Changing Role in the Community of Life (Oxford: Routledge, 2001)
  • Hughes, J.D., "Global Environmental History: The Long View", Globalizations, Vol. 2 No. 3, 2005, 293–208.
  • LaFreniere, Gilbert F., 2007. The Decline of Nature: Environmental History and the Western Worldview, Academica Press, Bethesda, MD ISBN 978-1933146409
  • MacKenzie, John M., Imperialism and the Natural World. (Manchester University Press, 1990)
  • McCormick, John, Reclaiming Paradise: The Global Environmental Movement. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989)
  • Rajan, Ravi S., Modernizing Nature: Forestry and Imperial Eco-Development, 1800–1950 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006)
  • Redclift, Michael R., Frontier: Histories of Civil Society and Nature (Cambridge, MA.: The MIT Press, 2006).
  • Stevis, Dimitris, "The Globalizations of the Environment", Globalizations, Vol. 2 No. 3, 2005, 323–334.
  • Williams, Michael, Deforesting the Earth: From Prehistory to Global Crisis. An Abridgement. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006)
  • White, Richard, The Organic Machine: The Remaking of the Columbia River. (Hill and Wang, 1996)
  • Worster, Donald, Nature's Economy: A Study of Ecological Ideals. (Cambridge University Press, 1977)
  • Zeilinga de Boer, Jelle and Donald Theodore Sanders, Volcanoes in Human History, The Far-reaching Effects of Major Eruptions. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2002) ISBN 978-0691118383

Germinal works by region edit

In 2004 a theme issue of Environment and History 10(4) provided an overview of environmental history as practiced in Africa, the Americas, Australia, New Zealand, China and Europe as well as those with global scope. J. Donald Hughes (2006) has also provided a global conspectus of major contributions to the environmental history literature.

  • George Perkins Marsh, Man and Nature; or, Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action, ed. David Lowenthal (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1965 [1864])

Africa edit

 
African landscape: Lesotho
  • Adams, Jonathan S. and Thomas McShane, The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation without Illusion (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996) 266p; covers 1900 to 1980s
  • Anderson, David; Grove, Richard. Conservation in Africa: People, Policies & Practice (1988), 355pp
  • Bolaane, Maitseo. "Chiefs, Hunters & Adventurers: The Foundation of the Okavango/Moremi National Park, Botswana". Journal of Historical Geography. 31.2 (April 2005): 241–259.
  • Carruthers, Jane. "Africa: Histories, Ecologies, and Societies", Environment and History, 10 (2004), pp. 379–406;
  • Cock, Jacklyn and Eddie Koch (eds.), Going Green: People, Politics, and the Environment in South Africa (Cape Town: Oxford University Press, 1991)
  • Dovers, Stephen, Ruth Edgecombe, and Bill Guest (eds.), South Africa's Environmental History: Cases and Comparisons (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2003)
  • Green Musselman, Elizabeth, "Plant Knowledge at the Cape: A Study in African and European Collaboration", International Journal of African Historical Studies, Vol. 36, 2003, 367–392
  • Jacobs, Nancy J., Environment, Power and Injustice: A South African History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003)
  • Maathai, Wangari, Green Belt Movement: Sharing the Approach and the Experience (New York: Lantern Books, 2003)
  • McCann, James, Green Land, Brown Land, Black Land: An Environmental History of Africa, 1800–1990 (Portsmouth: Heinemann, 1999)
  • Showers, Kate B. Imperial Gullies: Soil Erosion and Conservation in Lesotho (2005) 346pp
  • Steyn, Phia, "The lingering environmental impact of repressive governance: the environmental legacy of the apartheid-era for the new South Africa", Globalizations, 2#3 (2005), 391–403

Antarctica edit

  • Pyne, S.J., The Ice: A Journey to Antarctica. (University of Iowa Press, 1986).

Canada edit

United States edit

  • Allitt, Patrick. A Climate of Crisis: America in the Age of Environmentalism (2014), wide-ranging scholarly history since 1950s excerpt
  • Andrews, Richard N.L., Managing the Environment, Managing Ourselves: A History of American Environmental Policy (Yale University Press, 1999)
  • Bates, J. Leonard. "Fulfilling American Democracy: The Conservation Movement, 1907 to 1921", The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, (1957) 44#1 pp. 29–57. in JSTOR
  • Browning, Judkin and Timothy Silver. An Environmental History of the Civil War (2020) online review
  • Brinkley, Douglas G. The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America, (2009) excerpt and text search
  • Carson, Rachel, Silent Spring (Cambridge, Mass. : Riverside Press, 1962)
  • Cawley, R. McGreggor. Federal Land, Western Anger: The Sagebrush Rebellion and Environmental Politics (1993), on conservatives
  • Cronon, William, Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists and the Ecology of New England (New York: Hill and Wang, 1983)
  • Cronon, William, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1991)
  • Dant, Sara. Losing Eden: An Environmental History of the American West. (U of Nebraska Press, 2023). online, also see online book review
  • Flippen, J. Brooks. Nixon and the Environment (2000).
  • Gottlieb, Robert, Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement (Washington: Island Press, 1993)
  • Hays, Samuel P. Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency (1959), on Progressive Era.
  • Hays, Samuel P. Beauty, Health, and Permanence: Environmental Politics in the United States, 1955–1985 (1987), the standard scholarly history
  • Hays, Samuel, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890–1920 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1959)
    • Hays, Samuel P. A History of Environmental Politics since 1945 (2000), shorter standard history
  • King, Judson. The Conservation Fight, From Theodore Roosevelt to the Tennessee Valley Authority (2009)
  • Merchant, Carolyn. American environmental history: An introduction (Columbia University Press, 2007).
  • Merchant, Carolyn. The Columbia guide to American environmental history (Columbia University Press, 2012).
  • Merchant, Carolyn. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology and the Scientific Revolution (New York: Harper & Row, 1980)
  • Nash, Roderick. The Rights of Nature: A History of Environmental Ethics (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989)
  • Nash, Roderick. Wilderness and the American Mind, (4th ed. 2001), the standard intellectual history
  • Rice, James D. Nature and History in the Potomac Country: From Hunter-Gatherers to the Age of Jefferson (2009)
  • Sale, Kirkpatrick. The Green Revolution: The American Environmental Movement, 1962–1999 (New York: Hill & Wang, 1993)
  • Scheffer, Victor B. The Shaping of Environmentalism in America (1991).
  • Stradling, David (ed), Conservation in the Progressive Era: Classic Texts (Washington: University of Washington Press, 2004), primary sources
  • Strong, Douglas H. Dreamers & Defenders: American Conservationists. (1988) online edition, good biographical studies of the major leaders
  • Turner, James Morton, "The Specter of Environmentalism": Wilderness, Environmental Politics, and the Evolution of the New Right. The Journal of American History 96.1 (2009): 123–47
  • Unger, Nancy C., Beyond Nature's Housekeepers: American Women in Environmental History. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012)
  • Worster, Donald, Under Western Skies: Nature and History in the American West (Oxford University Press, 1992)
  • Melosi, Martin V., Coping with Abundance: Energy and Environment in Industrial America (Temple University Press, 1985)
  • Steinberg, Ted, Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History (Oxford University Press, 2002)
  • Rothman, Hal K. (1998). The Greening of a Nation? Environmentalism in the United States since 1945. Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace College Publishers. ISBN 0155028553.

Latin America and the Caribbean edit

  • Boyer, Christopher R. Political Landscapes: Forests, Conservation, and Community in Mexico. (Durham: Duke University Press 2015.)
  • Dean, Warren. With Broadax and Firebrand: The Destruction of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995)
  • Funes Monzote, Reinaldo. From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba: An Environmental History since 1492. (2008)
  • Matthews, Andrew S. Instituting Nature: Authority, Expertise, and Power in Mexican Forests. (Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 2011.)
  • Melville, Elinor. A Plague of Sheep: Environmental Consequences of the Conquest of Mexico. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994)
  • Miller, Shawn William. An Environmental History of Latin America. (2007)
  • Miller, Shawn William. Fruitless Trees: Portuguese Conservation and Brazil's Colonial Timber. Stanford: Stanford University Press 2000.
  • Noss, Andrew and Imke Oetting. "Hunter Self-Monitoring by the Izoceño-Guarani in the Bolivian Chaco". Biodiversity & Conservation. 14.11 (2005): 2679–2693.
  • Raffles, Hugh, et al. "Further Reflections on Amazonian Environmental History: Transformations of Rivers and Streams". Latin American Research Review. Vol. 38, Number 3, 2003: 165–187
  • Santiago, Myrna I. The Ecology of Oil: Environment, Labor, and the Mexican Revolution, 1900–1938. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2006.
  • Simonian, Lane. Defending the Land of the Jaguar: A History of Conservation in Mexico. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995)
  • Wakild, Emily. Revolutionary Parks: Conservation, Social Justice, and Mexico's National Parks, 1910–1940. Tucson: University of Arizona Press 2012.

South and South East Asia edit

 
Banaue rice terraces in the Philippines where traditional landraces have been grown for thousands of years
  • Boomgaard, Peter, ed. Paper Landscapes: Explorations in the Environment of Indonesia (Leiden: KITLV Press, 1997)
  • David, A. & Guha, R. (eds) 1995. Nature, Culture, Imperialism: Essays on the Environmental History of South Asia. Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • Fisher, Michael. An Environmental History of India: From Earliest Times to the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge UP, 2018)
  • Gadgil, M. and R. Guha. This Fissured Land: An Ecological History of India (University of California Press, 1993)
  • Grove, Richard, Vinita Damodaran, and Satpal Sangwan (eds.) Nature & the Orient: The Environmental History of South and Southeast Asia (Oxford University Press, 1998)
  • Hill, Christopher V., South Asia: An Environmental History (Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 2008)
  • Shiva, Vandana, Stolen Harvest: the Hijacking of the Global Food Supply (Cambridge MA: South End Press, 2000), ISBN 0-89608-608-9
  • Yok-shiu Lee and Alvin Y. So, Asia's Environmental Movements: Comparative Perspectives (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1999)
  • Iqbal, Iftekhar. The Bengal Delta: Ecology, State and Social Change, 1840–1943 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)

East Asia edit

  • Elvin, Mark & Ts'ui-jung Liu (eds.), Sediments of Time: Environment and Society in Chinese History (Cambridge University Press, 1998)
  • Totman, Conrad D., The Green Archipelago: Forestry in Preindustrial Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989)
  • Totman, Conrad D., Pre-industrial Korea and Japan in Environmental Perspective (Leiden: Brill, 2004)
  • Ts'ui-jung Liu, Sediments of Time: Environment and Society in Chinese History (Cambridge University Press, 1998)
  • Liu, Ts'ui-jung and James Beattie, eds, Environment, Modernization and Development in East Asia: Perspectives from Environmental History (Basingstoke: Palgrave Studies in World Environmental History, 2016)
  • Tull, Malcolm, and A. R. Krishnan. "Resource Use and Environmental Management in Japan, 1890–1990", in: J.R. McNeill (ed), Environmental History of the Pacific and the Pacific Rim (Aldershot Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing, 2001)
  • Menzie, Nicholas, Forest and Land Management in Late Imperial China (London, Macmillan Press. 1994)
  • Maohong, Bao, "Environmental History in China", Environment and History, Volume 10, Number 4, November 2004, pp. 475–499
  • Marks, R. B., Tigers, rice, silk and silt. Environment and economy in late imperial South China (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998)
  • Perdue, Peter C., "Lakes of Empire: Man and Water in Chinese History", Modern China, 16 (January 1990): 119–29
  • Shapiro, Judith, Mao's War against Nature: Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China (New York: Cambridge University Press. 2001) ISBN 978-0521786805

Middle East and North Africa edit

  • McNeill, J. R. "The Eccentricity of the Middle East and North Africa's Environmental History." Water on Sand: Environmental Histories of the Middle East and North Africa (2013): 27–50.
  • Mikhail, Alan, ed. Water on sand: Environmental histories of the Middle East and North Africa. Oxford University Press, 2013.
  • Dursun, Selçuk. "A call for an environmental history of the Ottoman Empire and Turkey: Reflections on the fourth ESEH conference." New Perspectives on Turkey 37 (2007): 211–222.
  • Dursun, Selçuk. "Forest and the state: history of forestry and forest administration in the Ottoman Empire." Unpublished PhD. Sabanci University (2007).
  • Mikhail, Alan. Nature and empire in Ottoman Egypt: An environmental history. Cambridge University Press, 2011.
  • White, Sam. "Rethinking disease in Ottoman history." International Journal of Middle East Studies 42, no. 4 (2010): 549–567.
  • * Burke III, Edmund, "The Coming Environmental Crisis in the Middle East: A Historical Perspective, 1750–2000 CE" (April 27, 2005). UC World History Workshop. Essays and Positions from the World History Workshop. Paper 2.
  • Tal, Alon, Pollution in a Promised Land: An Environmental History of Israel (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002)

Europe edit

 
Roman aqueduct and plaza, Segovia, Spain
  • Brimblecombe, Peter and Christian Pfister, The Silent Countdown: Essays in European Environmental History (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1993)
  • Crosby, Alfred W., Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900–1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986)
  • Christensen, Peter, Decline of Iranshahr: Irrigation and Environments in the History of the Middle East, 500 B.C. to 1500 A.D (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1993)
  • Ditt, Karl, 'Nature Conservation in England and Germany, 1900–1970: Forerunner of Environmental Protection?', Contemporary European History 5:1–28.
  • Hughes, J. Donald, Pan's Travail: Environmental Problems of the Ancient Greeks and Romans (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1994)
  • Hughes, J. Donald, The Mediterranean. An Environmental History (Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 2005)
  • Martí Escayol, Maria Antònia. La construcció del concepte de natura a la Catalunya moderna (Barcelona: Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, 2004)[71]
  • Netting, Robert, Balancing on an Alp: Ecological Change and Continuity in a Swiss Mountain Community (Cambridge University Press, 1981)
  • Parmentier, Isabelle, dir., Ledent, Carole, coll., La recherche en histoire de l'environnement : Belgique, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Namur, 2010 (Coll. Autres futurs).
  • Stephen J. Pyne, Vestal Fire. An Environmental History, Told through Fire, of Europe and Europe's Encounter with the World (Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1997)
  • Richards, John F., The Unending Frontier: Environmental History of the Early Modern World (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003)
  • Whited, Tamara L. (ed.), Northern Europe. An Environmental History (Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 2005)

Australia, New Zealand & Oceania edit

 
Polynesian outrigger canoe
  • Beattie, James, Empire and Environmental Anxiety: Health, Science, Art and Conservation in South Asia and Australasia, 1800–1920 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011)
  • Beattie, James, Emily O'Gorman and Matt Henry, eds, Climate, Science and Colonization: Histories from Australia and New Zealand (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
  • Bennett, Judith Ann, Natives and Exotics: World War II and Environment in the Southern Pacific (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2009)
  • Bennett, Judith Ann, Pacific Forest: A History of Resource Control and Contest in Solomon Islands, c. 1800–1997 (Cambridge and Leiden: White Horse Press and Brill, 2000)
  • Bridgman, H. A., "Could climate change have had an influence on the Polynesian migrations?", Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 41(1983) 193–206.
  • Brooking, Tom and Eric Pawson, Environmental Histories of New Zealand (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002).
  • Carron, L.T., A History of Forestry in Australia (Canberra, 1985).
  • Cassels, R., "The Role of Prehistoric Man in the Faunal Extinctions of New Zealand and other Pacific Islands", in Martin, P. S. and Klein, R. G. (eds.) Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution (Tucson, The University of Arizona Press, 1984)
  • D'Arcy, Paul, The People of the Sea: Environment, Identity, and History in Oceania (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2006)
  • Dargavel, John (ed.), Australia and New Zealand Forest Histories. Short Overviews, Australian Forest History Society Inc. Occasional Publications, No. 1 (Kingston: Australian Forest History Society, 2005)
  • Dovers, Stephen (ed), Essays in Australian Environmental History: Essays and Cases (Oxford: OUP, 1994).
  • Dovers, Stephen (ed.), Environmental History and Policy: Still Settling Australia (South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2000).
  • Flannery, Tim, The Future Eaters, An Ecological History of the Australian Lands and People (Sydney: Reed Books,1994) ISBN 0-8021-3943-4
  • Garden, Don, Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific. An Environmental History (Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio, 2005)
  • Hughes, J. Donald, "Nature and Culture in the Pacific Islands", Leidschrift, 21 (2006) 1, 129–144.
  • Hughes, J. Donald, "Tahiti, Hawaii, New Zealand: Polynesian impacts on Island Ecosystems", in: An Environmental History of the World. Humankind"s Changing Role in the Community of Life, (London & New York, Routledge, 2002)
  • James Beattie, "Environmental Anxiety in New Zealand, 1840–1941: Climate Change, Soil Erosion, Sand Drift, Flooding and Forest Conservation", Environment and History 9(2003): 379–392
  • Knight, Catherine, New Zealand's Rivers: An Environmental History (Christchurch: Canterbury University Press, 2016).
  • McNeill, John R., "Of Rats and Men. A Synoptic Environmental History of the Island Pacific", Journal of World History, Vol. 5, no. 2, 299–349
  • Pyne, Stephen, Burning Bush: A Fire History of Australia (New York, Henry Holt, 1991).
  • Robin, Libby, Defending the Little Desert: The Rise of Ecological Consciousness in Australia (Melbourne: MUP, 1998)
  • Robin, Libby, How a Continent Created a Nation (Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2007)
  • Robin, Libby, The Flight of the Emu: A Hundred Years of Australian Ornithology 1901–2001, (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2000)
  • Smith, Mike, Hesse, Paul (eds.), 23 Degrees S: Archaeology and Environmental History of the Southern Deserts (Canberra: National Museum of Australia Press, 2005)
  • Star, Paul, "New Zealand Environmental History: A Question of Attitudes", Environment and History 9(2003): 463–475
  • Young, Ann R.M, Environmental Change in Australia since 1788 (Oxford University Press, 2000)
  • Young, David, Our Islands, Our Selves: A History of Conservation in New Zealand ( Dunedin: Otago University Press, 2004)

United Kingdom edit

  • Beinart, William and Lotte Hughes, Environment and Empire (Oxford, 2007).
  • Clapp, Brian W., An Environmental History of Britain Since the Industrial Revolution (London, 1994). excerpt
  • Grove, Richard, Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860 (Cambridge, 1994).
  • Lambert, Robert, Contested Mountains (Cambridge, 2001).
  • Mosley, Stephen, The Chimney of the World: A History of Smoke Pollution in Victorian and Edwardian Manchester (White Horse, 2001).
  • Porter, Dale, The Thames Embankment: Environment, Technology, and Society in Victorian London, (University of Akron, 1998).
  • Simmonds, Ian G., Environmental History of Great Britain from 10,000 Years Ago to the Present (Edinburgh, 2001).
  • Sheail, John, An Environmental History of Twentieth-Century Britain (Basingstoke, 2002).
  • Thorsheim, Peter, Inventing Pollution: Coal, Smoke, and Culture in Britain since 1800 (Ohio University, 2006).

Future edit

 
Old and new human uses of the atmosphere

Environmental history, like all historical studies, shares the hope that through an examination of past events it may be possible to forge a more considered future. In particular a greater depth of historical knowledge can inform environmental controversies and guide policy decisions.

The subject continues to provide new perspectives, offering cooperation between scholars with different disciplinary backgrounds and providing an improved historical context to resource and environmental problems. There seems little doubt that, with increasing concern for our environmental future, environmental history will continue along the path of environmental advocacy from which it originated as "human impact on the living systems of the planet bring us no closer to utopia, but instead to a crisis of survival"[72] with key themes being population growth, climate change, conflict over environmental policy at different levels of human organization, extinction, biological invasions, the environmental consequences of technology especially biotechnology, the reduced supply of resources – most notably energy, materials and water. Hughes comments that environmental historians "will find themselves increasingly challenged by the need to explain the background of the world market economy and its effects on the global environment. Supranational instrumentalities threaten to overpower conservation in a drive for what is called sustainable development, but which in fact envisions no limits to economic growth".[73] Hughes also notes that "environmental history is notably absent from nations that most adamantly reject US, or Western influences".[74]

Michael Bess sees the world increasingly permeated by potent technologies in a process he calls "artificialization" which has been accelerating since the 1700s, but at a greatly accelerated rate after 1945. Over the next fifty years, this transformative process stands a good chance of turning our physical world, and our society, upside-down. Environmental historians can "play a vital role in helping humankind to understand the gale-force of artifice that we have unleashed on our planet and on ourselves".[75]

Against this background "environmental history can give an essential perspective, offering knowledge of the historical process that led to the present situation, give examples of past problems and solutions, and an analysis of the historical forces that must be dealt with"[76] or, as expressed by William Cronon, "The viability and success of new human modes of existing within the constraints of the environment and its resources requires both an understanding of the past and an articulation of a new ethic for the future."[77]

Related journals edit

Key journals in this field include:

See also edit


References edit

  1. ^ MacEachern & Turkel 2009, p. xii.
  2. ^ Worster 1988, p. 293.
  3. ^ a b Grove 1994.
  4. ^ Nash 1970, pp. 249–260.
  5. ^ Nash 1972, p. 362.
  6. ^ . History for the Future. Pittsburgh: WRCT. Archived from the original on 26 April 2012.
  7. ^ Gambino, Megan (4 October 2011). "Alfred W. Crosby on the Columbian Exchange". smithsonianmag.com. The Smithsonian. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  8. ^ a b McNeill 2003, pp. 5–43
  9. ^ White 1985.
  10. ^ Hughes 2006.
  11. ^ Dovers 1994, p. 4.
  12. ^ Worster 1988, p. 289.
  13. ^ a b c Hughes 2001, p. 4
  14. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 1.
  15. ^ a b c Worster 1988, p. 290
  16. ^ Worster 1988, p. 292.
  17. ^ Worster 1993, p. 20.
  18. ^ a b Worster 1988, p. 306
  19. ^ Dovers 1994, p. 5.
  20. ^ a b Hughes 2008, p. 8
  21. ^ Hughes 2008, p. 5.
  22. ^ Hughes 2008, p. 3.
  23. ^ Worster 1988, pp. 289–308.
  24. ^ a b c Warde & Sorlin 2007.
  25. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 53–92.
  26. ^ Krech, McNeill & Merchant 2003.
  27. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 53–93.
  28. ^ Dovers 1994, p. 14.
  29. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 78.
  30. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 18–35.
  31. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 21.
  32. ^ McNeill, J. R. "The Historiography of Environmental History" (PDF). World Environmental History. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  33. ^ Eddy, Matthew Daniel (2008). The Language of Mineralogy: John Walker, Chemistry and the Edinburgh Medical School 1750-1800. Ashgate.
  34. ^ McNeill 2003.
  35. ^ Rome, Adam. "Conservation, Preservation, and Environmental Activism: A Survey of the Historical Literature". Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  36. ^ Hughes 2001, p. 5.
  37. ^ Winks, Robin, ed. (1999). The Oxford History of the British Empire: Volume V: Historiography. OUP Oxford. pp. 664–65. ISBN 9780191647697.
  38. ^ Madhav Gadgil and Ramachandra Guha, This fissured land: an ecological history of India (1993).
  39. ^ MacKenzie, John M. (1997). The empire of nature: Hunting, conservation and British Imperialism.
  40. ^ Barton, Gregory (2001). "Empire forestry and the origins of environmentalism". Journal of Historical Geography. 27 (4): 529–552. doi:10.1006/jhge.2001.0353.
  41. ^ Beattie, James (February 2012). "Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire". History Compass. 10 (2): 129–139. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2011.00824.x.
  42. ^ Beinart, William; Hughes, Lotte (2007). Environment and empire.
  43. ^ Beattie, James; Melillo, Edward; O'Gorman, Emily (2014). "Rethinking the British Empire through eco-cultural networks: materialist-cultural environmental history, relational connections and agency". Environment and History. 20 (4): 561–575. doi:10.3197/096734014X14091313617406.
  44. ^ "NiCHE Website".
  45. ^ Oosthoek, K. Jan. "What is Environmental History?". Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  46. ^ "RCC Website".
  47. ^ "Environment & Society Portal Website".
  48. ^ Bess et al. 2005, pp. 30–109.
  49. ^ Martinez-Alier & Schandl 2002, pp. 175–176.
  50. ^ Warde & Sorlin 2007, pp. 107–130.
  51. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 2–3.
  52. ^ Marsh 1965, p. 15.
  53. ^ Grove 1992, pp. 42–47.
  54. ^ Opie 1983, pp. 8–16.
  55. ^ Worster 1993.
  56. ^ Hurley, Andrew (1995). Environmental Inequalities: Class, Race, and Industrial Pollution in Gary, Indiana, 1945-1980. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807845183.
  57. ^ Islam, S. Nazrul. "Climate Change and Social Inequality" (PDF). UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.
  58. ^ Jason L. Newton, "Mining in the West: Knowing Nature through Uncertainty and the Problem of the Declensionist Narrative in Environmental History" H-Net Reviews: H-SHGAPE (June, 2014)
  59. ^ Will Sarvis, Embracing Philanthropic Environmentalism: the Grand Responsibility of Stewardship (Jefferson, NC: McFarland Pubs., 2019), 50-54.
  60. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 98–99.
  61. ^ Dovers 1994, pp. 14–16.
  62. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 5.
  63. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 97.
  64. ^ White 2001, p. 55.
  65. ^ Cronon 1995.
  66. ^ Worster 1988, pp. 289–387.
  67. ^ Merchant 2002.
  68. ^ Cronon 1995, pp. 1347–1376.
  69. ^ Simmons 1993.
  70. ^ Hughes 2008, p. 6.
  71. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
  72. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 125.
  73. ^ Hughes 2006, pp. 92–93.
  74. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 75.
  75. ^ Bess 2005.
  76. ^ Hughes 2006, p. 126.
  77. ^ "See Cronon quote here". Searchworks.stanford.edu. Retrieved 3 January 2014.

Bibliography edit

Global edit

  • Uekötter, Frank. The Vortex: An Environmental History of the Modern World (University of Pittsburgh Press, 20230 online book review
  • Williams, Michael (2003). Deforesting the Earth: From Prehistory to Global Crisis. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226899473.

Asia & Middle East edit

Europe and Russia edit

  • Bonhomme, Brian. Forests, Peasants and Revolutionaries: Forest Conservation & Organization in Soviet Russia, 1917-1929 (2005) 252pp
  • Campopiano, M., “Evolution of the Landscape and the Social and Political Organisation of Water Management: the Po Valley in the Middle Ages (Fifth to Fourteenth Centuries)”, in Borger, de Kraker, Soens, Thoen and Tys, Landscapes or seascapes?, (CORN, 13), 2013, 313-332 [1]
  • Cioc, Mark. The Rhine: An Eco-Biography, 1815-2000 (2002).
  • Clapp, Brian William. An environmental history of Britain since the industrial revolution (Routledge, 2014).
  • Dryzek, John S., et al. Green states and social movements: environmentalism in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Norway (Oxford UP, 2003).
  • Hoffmann, Richard. An Environmental History of Medieval Europe (2014)
  • Luckin, Bill, and Peter Thorsheim, eds. A Mighty Capital under Threat: The Environmental History of London, 1800-2000 (U of Pittsburgh Press, 2020) online review.
  • Smout, T. Christopher. Nature contested: environmental history in Scotland and Northern England since 1600 (2000)
  • Thorsheim, Peter. Inventing Pollution: Coal, Smoke, and Culture in Britain since 1800 (2009)
  • Uekotter, Frank. The greenest nation?: A new history of German environmentalism (Mit Press, 2014).
  • Warren, Charles R. Managing Scotland's environment (2002)
  • Weiner, Douglas R. Models of Nature: Ecology, Conservation and Cultural Revolution in Soviet Russia (2000) 324pp; covers 1917 to 1939
  • Whyte, Ian D. (2004). Landscape and History since 1500. Reaktion Books. ISBN 9781861894533.

Historiography edit

  • Arndt, Melanie: Environmental History, Version: 3, in: Docupedia Zeitgeschichte, 23. August 2016
  • Beattie, James. "Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire," History Compass (Feb 2012) 10#2 pp 129–139.
  • Bess, Michael, Mark Cioc, and James Sievert, "Environmental History Writing in Southern Europe," Environmental History, 5 (2000), pp. 545–56;
  • Bess, Michael; Bess, M.; Giles-Vernick, T.; Gugliotta, A.; Guha, R.; Hall, M.; Igler, D.; Jones, S. D.; et al. (2005). "Anniversary Forum: What Next for Environmental History?". Environmental History. 10 (1): 30–109. doi:10.1093/envhis/10.1.30.
  • Bess, Michael (2005). "Artificialization and its Discontents". Environmental History. 10 (1): 5 para.
  • Cioc, Mark, Björn-Ola Linnér, and Matt Osborn, "Environmental History Writing in Northern Europe," Environmental History, 5 (2000), pp. 396–406
  • Coates, Peter. "Emerging from the Wilderness (or, from Redwoods to Bananas): Recent Environmental History in the United States and the Rest of the Americas," Environment and History 10 (2004), pp. 407–38
  • Conway, Richard. "The Environmental History of Colonial Mexico," History Compass (2017) 15#7 DOI: 10.1111/hic3.12388
  • Cronon, William, ed. (1995). Uncommon Ground: Toward Reinventing Nature. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-03872-6.
  • Dovers, Stephen, ed. (1994). Essays in Australian Environmental History: Essays and Cases. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553482-4.
  • Febvre, Lucien (1925). A Geographical Introduction to History. New York: Alfred A Knopf. ISBN 0-7103-0844-2.
  • Grove, Richard H. (1992). "Origins of Western Environmentalism". Scientific American. 267 (1): 42–47. Bibcode:1992SciAm.267a..42G. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0792-42.
  • Grove, Richard (1994). Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600–1860. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56513-8.
  • Haq, Gary, and Alistair Paul. Environmentalism since 1945 (Routledge, 2013).
  • Hay, Peter. Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought (2002), standard scholarly history excerpt and text search
  • Hughes, J. Donald (2001). An Environmental History of the World: Humankind's Changing Role in the Community of Life (Routledge Studies in Physical Geography and Environment). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-13619-8.
  • Hughes, J. Donald (2006). What is Environmental History? (What is History Series). Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-3189-9.
  • Hughes, J. Donald (2008). "Three Dimensions of Environmental History". Environment and History. 14 (3): 1–12. doi:10.3197/096734008X333545.
  • Huxley, Thomas H. (1863). Man's Place in Nature. New York (2003): Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-43273-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • McNeill, John R. (2003). "Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History". History and Theory. 42 (1): 5–43. doi:10.1046/j.1468-2303.2003.00255.x.
  • MacEachern, Alan; Turkel, William J., eds. (2009). Method & Meaning in Canadian Environmental History. Toronto: Nelson Education. ISBN 978-0-17-644116-6.
  • Mancall, Peter C. "Pigs for Historians: Changes in the Land and Beyond". William and Mary Quarterly (2010) 67#2 pp. 347–375 in JSTOR
  • Marsh, George P (1965) [1864]. Lowenthal, David (ed.). Man and Nature; or, Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action. Cambridge, Ma: Belknap Press of Harvard University.
  • Martinez-Alier, J.; Schandl, H. (2002). "Introduction: Special Section: European Environmental History and Ecological Economics". Ecological Economics. 41 (2): 175–176. doi:10.1016/S0921-8009(02)00033-2.
  • McNeill, J. R. (2010). "The State of the Field of Environmental History". Annual Review of Environment and Resources. 35: 345–374. doi:10.1146/annurev-environ-040609-105431.
  • Merchant, Carolyn (2002). The Columbia Guide to American Environmental History. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11233-8.
  • Melosi, Martin V. (2010). "Humans, Cities, and Nature: How Do Cities Fit in the Material World?". Journal of Urban History. 36 (1): 3–21. doi:10.1177/0096144209349876. S2CID 145481490.
  • Mosley, Stephen. "Common Ground: Integrating Social and Environmental History," Journal of Social History, Volume 39, Number 3, Spring 2006, pp. 915–933; relation to Social history
  • Nash, Roderick (1970). "The State of Environmental History". In Bass, H.J (ed.). The State of American History. Chicago: Organization of American Historians and Quadrangle Books. ISBN 0-585-09291-5.
  • Nash, Roderick (1972). "American Environmental History: A New Teaching Frontier". Pacific Historical Review. 41 (3): 362–372. doi:10.2307/3637864. JSTOR 3637864.
  • Opie, John (1983). "Environmental History: Pitfalls and Opportunities". Environmental Review. 7 (1): 8–16. doi:10.2307/envrev/7.1.8. S2CID 155741133.
  • Robin, Libby, and Tom Griffiths, "Environmental History in Australasia," Environment and History, 10 (2004), pp. 439–74
  • Warde, Paul & Sorlin, Sverker (2007). "The Problem of the Problem of Environmental History: A Re-reading of the Field and its Purpose". Environmental History. 12 (1): 107–130. doi:10.1093/envhis/12.1.107.
  • Sedrez, Lise. (2011) "Environmental History of Modern Latin America" in A Companion to Latin American History, ed. Thomas H. Holloway. Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Uekötter, Frank (2004). "The Old Conservation History – and the New: An Argument for Fresh Perspectives on an Established Topic". Historical Social Research. 29 (3): 171–191.
  • Wakild, Emily (2011) "Environment and Environmentalism" in A Companion to Mexican History and Culture, William H. Beezley, ed. Wiley Blackwell.
  • Warde, Paul & Sorlin, Sverker (2009). Nature's End. History and the Environment. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-20346-4.
  • White, Richard (1985). "Environmental History: The Development of a New Historical Field". Pacific Historical Review. 54 (3): 297–335. doi:10.2307/3639634. JSTOR 3639634.
  • White, Richard (2001). "Environmental History: Retrospect and Prospect". Pacific Historical Review. 70 (1): 55–57. doi:10.1525/phr.2001.70.1.55.
  • Worster, Donald, ed. (1988). The Ends of the Earth: Perspectives on Modern Environmental History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34846-3.
  • Worster, Donald (1993). The Wealth of Nature. Environmental History and the Ecological Imagination. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509264-3.

Further reading edit

  • Biasillo, Roberta, Claudio de Majo, eds. "Storytelling and Environmental History: Experiences from Germany and Italy", RCC Perspectives: Transformations in Environment and Society 2020, no. 2. doi.org/10.5282/rcc/9116.
  • Hall, Marcus, and Patrick Kupper (eds.), "Crossing Mountains: The Challenges of Doing Environmental History", RCC Perspectives 2014, no. 4. doi.org/10.5282/rcc/6510.
  • Mauch, Christof, "Notes From the Greenhouse: Making the Case for Environmental History", RCC Perspectives 2013, no. 6. doi.org/10.5282/rcc/5661.

External links edit

Podcasts
  • Jan W.Oosthoek podcasts on many aspects of the subject including interviews with eminent environmental historians
  • Nature's Past: Canadian Environmental History Podcast features monthly discussions about the environmental history research community in Canada.
Institutions & resources
  • International Consortium of Environmental History Organizations (ICE-HO)
  • Oosthoek, K.J.W. What is environmental history?
  • American Society for Environmental History
  • European Society for Environmental History
  • Environmental History Now
  • Environmental History Resources
  • Environmental History Timeline
  • Environmental History on the Internet
  • Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society and its Environment & Society Portal
  • Forest History Society
  • Australian and New Zealand Environmental History Network
  • Centre for Environmental History at the Australian National University
  • Network in Canadian History and the Environment
  • Centre for World Environmental History, University of Sussex
  • Croatian journal for environmental history in croatian, english, german and slovenian
  • Environmental History Virtual Library
  • Environmental History Top News
  • Environmental History Mobile Application Project
  • HistoricalClimatology.com Explores climate history, a form of environmental history.
  • Climate History Network Network of climate historians.
  • Environment & Society Portal
  • Turkish Society for Environmental History 2015-08-17 at the Wayback Machine
Journals
  • JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - Environmental History [1996–2007 (Volumes 1–12)]
  • JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - Forest & Conservation History [1990–1995 (Volumes 34–39)]
  • JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - Environmental Review: ER [1976–1989 (Volumes 1–13)]
  • JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - Environmental History Review [1990–1995 (Volumes 14–19)]
  • JSTOR: All Volumes and Issues - Browse - Journal of Forest History [1974–1989 (Volumes 18–33)]
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    environmental, history, this, article, about, topic, environmental, history, journal, same, name, environmental, history, journal, study, human, interaction, with, natural, world, over, time, emphasising, active, role, nature, plays, influencing, human, affair. This article is about the topic of environmental history For the journal of the same name see Environmental History journal Environmental history is the study of human interaction with the natural world over time emphasising the active role nature plays in influencing human affairs and vice versa The city of Machu Picchu was constructed c 1450 AD at the height of the Inca Empire It has commanding views down two valleys and a nearly impassable mountain at its back There is an ample supply of spring water and enough land for a plentiful food supply The hillsides leading to it have been terraced to provide farmland for crops reduce soil erosion protect against landslides and create steep slopes to discourage potential invaders Environmental history first emerged in the United States out of the environmental movement of the 1960s and 1970s and much of its impetus still stems from present day global environmental concerns 1 The field was founded on conservation issues but has broadened in scope to include more general social and scientific history and may deal with cities population or sustainable development As all history occurs in the natural world environmental history tends to focus on particular time scales geographic regions or key themes It is also a strongly multidisciplinary subject that draws widely on both the humanities and natural science The subject matter of environmental history can be divided into three main components 2 The first nature itself and its change over time includes the physical impact of humans on the Earth s land water atmosphere and biosphere The second category how humans use nature includes the environmental consequences of increasing population more effective technology and changing patterns of production and consumption Other key themes are the transition from nomadic hunter gatherer communities to settled agriculture in the neolithic revolution the effects of colonial expansion and settlements and the environmental and human consequences of the industrial and technological revolutions 3 Finally environmental historians study how people think about nature the way attitudes beliefs and values influence interaction with nature especially in the form of myths religion and science Contents 1 Origin of name and early works 2 Historiography 2 1 Definition 2 2 Subject matter 2 2 1 Dimensions 2 2 2 Themes 2 2 3 Scale 3 History 3 1 Moral and political inspiration 3 2 British Empire 4 Current practice 5 Related disciplines 6 Issues 6 1 Global sustainability 6 2 Advocacy 6 3 Declensionist narratives 6 4 Presentism and culpability 6 5 Environmental determinism 7 Methodology 7 1 Some key works 8 Germinal works by region 8 1 Africa 8 2 Antarctica 8 3 Canada 8 4 United States 8 5 Latin America and the Caribbean 8 6 South and South East Asia 8 7 East Asia 8 8 Middle East and North Africa 8 9 Europe 8 10 Australia New Zealand amp Oceania 8 11 United Kingdom 9 Future 10 Related journals 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Global 13 2 Asia amp Middle East 13 3 Europe and Russia 13 4 Historiography 14 Further reading 15 External linksOrigin of name and early works editFurther information Roderick Nash In 1967 Roderick Nash published Wilderness and the American Mind a work that has become a classic text of early environmental history In an address to the Organization of American Historians in 1969 published in 1970 Nash used the expression environmental history 4 although 1972 is generally taken as the date when the term was first coined 5 The 1959 book by Samuel P Hays Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890 1920 while being a major contribution to American political history is now also regarded as a founding document in the field of environmental history Hays is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Pittsburgh 6 Alfred W Crosby s book The Columbian Exchange 1972 is another key early work of environmental history 7 Historiography editBrief overviews of the historiography of environmental history have been published by J R McNeill 8 Richard White 9 and J Donald Hughes 10 In 2014 Oxford University Press published a volume of 25 essays in The Oxford Handbook of Environmental History Definition edit There is no universally accepted definition of environmental history In general terms it is a history that tries to explain why our environment is like it is and how humanity has influenced its current condition as well as commenting on the problems and opportunities of tomorrow 11 Donald Worster s widely quoted 1988 definition states that environmental history is the interaction between human cultures and the environment in the past 12 In 2001 J Donald Hughes defined the subject as the study of human relationships through time with the natural communities of which they are a part in order to explain the processes of change that affect that relationship 13 and in 2006 as history that seeks understanding of human beings as they have lived worked and thought in relationship to the rest of nature through the changes brought by time 14 As a method environmental history is the use of ecological analysis as a means of understanding human history an account of changes in human societies as they relate to changes in the natural environment 13 Environmental historians are also interested in what people think about nature and how they have expressed those ideas in folk religions popular culture literature and art 13 In 2003 J R McNeill defined it as the history of the mutual relations between humankind and the rest of nature 8 Subject matter edit Traditional historical analysis has over time extended its range of study from the activities and influence of a few significant people to a much broader social political economic and cultural analysis Environmental history further broadens the subject matter of conventional history In 1988 Donald Worster stated that environmental history attempts to make history more inclusive in its narratives 15 by examining the role and place of nature in human life 16 and in 1993 that Environmental history explores the ways in which the biophysical world has influenced the course of human history and the ways in which people have thought about and tried to transform their surroundings 17 The interdependency of human and environmental factors in the creation of landscapes is expressed through the notion of the cultural landscape Worster also questioned the scope of the discipline asking We study humans and nature therefore can anything human or natural be outside our enquiry 18 Environmental history is generally treated as a subfield of history But some environmental historians challenge this assumption arguing that while traditional history is human history the story of people and their institutions 19 humans cannot place themselves outside the principles of nature 20 In this sense they argue that environmental history is a version of human history within a larger context one less dependent on anthropocentrism even though anthropogenic change is at the center of its narrative 21 Dimensions edit nbsp General view of Funkville in 1864 Oil Creek Pennsylvania USJ Donald Hughes responded to the view that environmental history is light on theory or lacking theoretical structure by viewing the subject through the lens of three dimensions nature and culture history and science and scale 22 This advances beyond Worster s recognition of three broad clusters of issues to be addressed by environmental historians although both historians recognize that the emphasis of their categories might vary according to the particular study 23 as clearly some studies will concentrate more on society and human affairs and others more on the environment Themes edit Several themes are used to express these historical dimensions A more traditional historical approach is to analyse the transformation of the globe s ecology through themes like the separation of man from nature during the neolithic revolution imperialism and colonial expansion exploration agricultural change the effects of the industrial and technological revolution and urban expansion More environmental topics include human impact through influences on forestry fire climate change sustainability and so on According to Paul Warde the increasingly sophisticated history of colonization and migration can take on an environmental aspect tracing the pathways of ideas and species around the globe and indeed is bringing about an increased use of such analogies and colonial understandings of processes within European history 24 The importance of the colonial enterprise in Africa the Caribbean and Indian Ocean has been detailed by Richard Grove 3 Much of the literature consists of case studies targeted at the global national and local levels 25 Scale edit Although environmental history can cover billions of years of history over the whole Earth it can equally concern itself with local scales and brief time periods 26 Many environmental historians are occupied with local regional and national histories 27 Some historians link their subject exclusively to the span of human history every time period in human history 20 while others include the period before human presence on Earth as a legitimate part of the discipline Ian Simmons s Environmental History of Great Britain covers a period of about 10 000 years There is a tendency to difference in time scales between natural and social phenomena the causes of environmental change that stretch back in time may be dealt with socially over a comparatively brief period 28 Although at all times environmental influences have extended beyond particular geographic regions and cultures during the 20th and early 21st centuries anthropogenic environmental change has assumed global proportions most prominently with climate change but also as a result of settlement the spread of disease and the globalization of world trade 29 History edit nbsp Nature preservationist John Muir with U S President Theodore Roosevelt left on Glacier Point in Yosemite National ParkThe questions of environmental history date back to antiquity including 30 Hippocrates the father of medicine who asserted that different cultures and human temperaments could be related to the surroundings in which peoples lived in Airs Waters Places 31 Scholars as varied as Ibn Khaldun and Montesquieu found climate to be a key determinant of human behavior 32 During the Enlightenment there was a rising awareness of the environment and scientists addressed themes of sustainability via natural history and medicine 33 However the origins of the subject in its present form are generally traced to the 20th century In 1929 a group of French historians founded the journal Annales in many ways a forerunner of modern environmental history since it took as its subject matter the reciprocal global influences of the environment and human society The idea of the impact of the physical environment on civilizations was espoused by this Annales School to describe the long term developments that shape human history 18 by focusing away from political and intellectual history toward agriculture demography and geography Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie a pupil of the Annales School was the first to really embrace in the 1950s environmental history in a more contemporary form 34 One of the most influential members of the Annales School was Lucien Febvre 1878 1956 whose 1922 book A Geographical Introduction to History is now a classic in the field The most influential empirical and theoretical work in the subject has been done in the United States where teaching programs first emerged and a generation of trained environmental historians is now active 24 In the United States environmental history as an independent field of study emerged in the general cultural reassessment and reform of the 1960s and 1970s along with environmentalism conservation history 35 and a gathering awareness of the global scale of some environmental issues This was in large part a reaction to the way nature was represented in history at the time which portrayed the advance of culture and technology as releasing humans from dependence on the natural world and providing them with the means to manage it and celebrated human mastery over other forms of life and the natural environment and expected technological improvement and economic growth to accelerate 36 Environmental historians intended to develop a post colonial historiography that was more inclusive in its narratives 15 Moral and political inspiration edit Moral and political inspiration to environmental historians has come from American writers and activists such as Henry Thoreau John Muir Aldo Leopold and Rachel Carson Environmental history frequently promoted a moral and political agenda although it steadily became a more scholarly enterprise 15 Early attempts to define the field were made in the United States by Roderick Nash in The State of Environmental History and in other works by frontier historians Frederick Jackson Turner James Malin and Walter Prescott Webb who analyzed the process of settlement Their work was expanded by a second generation of more specialized environmental historians such as Alfred Crosby Samuel P Hays Donald Worster William Cronon Richard White Carolyn Merchant J R McNeill Donald Hughes and Chad Montrie in the United States and Paul Warde Sverker Sorlin Robert A Lambert T C Smout and Peter Coates in Europe British Empire edit Although environmental history was growing rapidly as a field after 1970 in the United States it only reached historians of the British Empire in the 1990s 37 38 39 Gregory Barton argues that the concept of environmentalism emerged from forestry studies and emphasizes the British imperial role in that research He argues that imperial forestry movement in India around 1900 included government reservations new methods of fire protection and attention to revenue producing forest management The result eased the fight between romantic preservationists and laissez faire businessmen thus giving the compromise from which modern environmentalism emerged 40 In recent years numerous scholars cited by James Beattie have examined the environmental impact of the Empire 41 Beinart and Hughes argue that the discovery and commercial or scientific use of new plants was an important concern in the 18th and 19th centuries The efficient use of rivers through dams and irrigation projects was an expensive but important method of raising agricultural productivity Searching for more efficient ways of using natural resources the British moved flora fauna and commodities around the world sometimes resulting in ecological disruption and radical environmental change Imperialism also stimulated more modern attitudes toward nature and subsidized botany and agricultural research 42 Scholars have used the British Empire to examine the utility of the new concept of eco cultural networks as a lens for examining interconnected wide ranging social and environmental processes 43 Current practice edit nbsp Frontier historian Frederick Jackson Turner 1861 1932 In the United States the American Society for Environmental History was founded in 1977 while the first institute devoted specifically to environmental history in Europe was established in 1991 based at the University of St Andrews in Scotland In 1986 the Dutch foundation for the history of environment and hygiene Net Werk was founded and publishes four newsletters per year In the UK the White Horse Press in Cambridge has since 1995 published the journal Environment and History which aims to bring scholars in the humanities and biological sciences closer together in constructing long and well founded perspectives on present day environmental problems and a similar publication Tijdschrift voor Ecologische Geschiedenis Journal for Environmental History is a combined Flemish Dutch initiative mainly dealing with topics in the Netherlands and Belgium although it also has an interest in European environmental history Each issue contains abstracts in English French and German In 1999 the Journal was converted into a yearbook for environmental history In Canada the Network in Canadian History and Environment facilitates the growth of environmental history through numerous workshops and a significant digital infrastructure including their website and podcast 44 Communication between European nations is restricted by language difficulties In April 1999 a meeting was held in Germany to overcome these problems and to co ordinate environmental history in Europe This meeting resulted in the creation of the European Society for Environmental History in 1999 Only two years after its establishment ESEH held its first international conference in St Andrews Scotland Around 120 scholars attended the meeting and 105 papers were presented on topics covering the whole spectrum of environmental history The conference showed that environmental history is a viable and lively field in Europe and since then ESEH has expanded to over 400 members and continues to grow and attracted international conferences in 2003 and 2005 In 1999 the Centre for Environmental History was established at the University of Stirling Some history departments at European universities are now offering introductory courses in environmental history and postgraduate courses in Environmental history have been established at the Universities of Nottingham Stirling and Dundee and more recently a Graduierten Kolleg was created at the University of Gottingen in Germany 45 In 2009 the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society RCC an international interdisciplinary center for research and education in the environmental humanities and social sciences was founded as a joint initiative of Munich s Ludwig Maximilians Universitat and the Deutsches Museum with the generous support of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research 46 The Environment amp Society Portal environmentandsociety org is the Rachel Carson Center s open access digital archive and publication platform 47 Related disciplines editEnvironmental history prides itself in bridging the gap between the arts and natural sciences although to date the scales weigh on the side of science A definitive list of related subjects would be lengthy indeed and singling out those for special mention a difficult task However those frequently quoted include historical geography the history and philosophy of science history of technology and climate science On the biological side there is above all ecology and historical ecology but also forestry and especially forest history archaeology and anthropology When the subject engages in environmental advocacy it has much in common with environmentalism With increasing globalization and the impact of global trade on resource distribution concern over never ending economic growth and the many human inequities environmental history is now gaining allies in the fields of ecological and environmental economics 48 49 Engagement with sociological thinkers and the humanities is limited but cannot be ignored through the beliefs and ideas that guide human action This has been seen as the reason for a perceived lack of support from traditional historians 24 Issues editThe subject has a number of areas of lively debate These include discussion concerning what subject matter is most appropriate whether environmental advocacy can detract from scholarly objectivity standards of professionalism in a subject where much outstanding work has been done by non historians the relative contribution of nature and humans in determining the passage of history the degree of connection with and acceptance by other disciplines but especially mainstream history For Paul Warde the sheer scale scope and diffuseness of the environmental history endeavour calls for an analytical toolkit a range of common issues and questions to push forward collectively and a core problem He sees a lack of human agency in its texts and suggest it be written more to act as of information for environmental scientists incorporation of the notion of risk a closer analysis of what it is we mean by environment confronting the way environmental history is at odds with the humanities because it emphasises the division between materialist and cultural or constructivist explanations for human behaviour 50 Global sustainability edit nbsp Achieving sustainability will enable the Earth to continue supporting human life as we know it Blue Marble NASA composite images 2001 left 2002 right Main article Sustainability Many of the themes of environmental history inevitably examine the circumstances that produced the environmental problems of the present day a litany of themes that challenge global sustainability including population consumerism and materialism climate change waste disposal deforestation and loss of wilderness industrial agriculture species extinction depletion of natural resources invasive organisms and urban development 51 The simple message of sustainable use of renewable resources is frequently repeated and early as 1864 George Perkins Marsh was pointing out that the changes we make in the environment may later reduce the environments usefulness to humans so any changes should be made with great care 52 what we would nowadays call enlightened self interest Richard Grove has pointed out that States will act to prevent environmental degradation only when their economic interests are threatened 53 Advocacy edit Main article Advocacy It is not clear whether environmental history should promote a moral or political agenda The strong emotions raised by environmentalism conservation and sustainability can interfere with historical objectivity polemical tracts and strong advocacy can compromise objectivity and professionalism Engagement with the political process certainly has its academic perils 54 although accuracy and commitment to the historical method is not necessarily threatened by environmental involvement environmental historians have a reasonable expectation that their work will inform policy makers 55 A recent historiographical shift has placed an increased emphasis on inequality as an element of environmental history Imbalances of power in resources industry and politics have resulted in the burden of industrial pollution being shifted to less powerful populations in both the geographic and social spheres 56 A critical examination of the traditional environmentalist movement from this historical perspective notes the ways in which early advocates of environmentalism sought the aesthetic preservation of middle class spaces and sheltered their own communities from the worst effects of air and water pollution while neglecting the plight of the less privileged Communities with less economic and sociopolitical power often lack the resources to get involved in environmental advocacy Environmental history increasingly highlights the ways in which the middle class environmental movement has fallen short and left behind entire communities Interdisciplinary research now understands historic inequality as a lens through which to predict future social developments in the environmental sphere particularly with regard to climate change The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs cautions that a warming planet will exacerbate environmental and other inequalities particularly with regard to a increase in the exposure of the disadvantaged groups to the adverse effects of climate change b increase in their susceptibility to damage caused by climate change and c decrease in their ability to cope and recover from the damage suffered 57 As an interdisciplinary field that encompasses a new understanding of social justice dynamics in a rapidly changing global climate environmental history is inherently advocative Declensionist narratives edit Narratives of environmental history tend to be what scholars call declensionist that is accounts of increasing decline under human activity 58 In other words declensionist history is a form of the lost golden age narrative that has repeated appeared in human thought since ancient times 59 Presentism and culpability edit Main article Presentism historical analysis Under the accusation of presentism it is sometimes claimed that with its genesis in the late 20th century environmentalism and conservation issues environmental history is simply a reaction to contemporary problems an attempt to read late twentieth century developments and concerns back into past historical periods in which they were not operative and certainly not conscious to human participants during those times 60 This is strongly related to the idea of culpability In environmental debate blame can always be apportioned but it is more constructive for the future to understand the values and imperatives of the period under discussion so that causes are determined and the context explained 61 Environmental determinism edit Further information Environmental determinism and Cultural determinism nbsp Ploughing farmer in ancient Egypt Mural in the burial chamber of artisan Sennedjem c 1200 BCEFor some environmental historians the general conditions of the environment the scale and arrangement of land and sea the availability of resources and the presence or absence of animals available for domestication and associated organisms and disease vectors that makes the development of human cultures possible and even predispose the direction of their development 62 and that history is inevitably guided by forces that are not of human origin or subject to human choice 63 This approach has been attributed to American environmental historians Webb and Turner 64 and more recently to Jared Diamond in his book Guns Germs and Steel where the presence or absence of disease vectors and resources such as plants and animals that are amenable to domestication that may not only stimulate the development of human culture but even determine to some extent the direction of that development The claim that the path of history has been forged by environmental rather than cultural forces is referred to as environmental determinism while at the other extreme is what may be called cultural determinism An example of cultural determinism would be the view that human influence is so pervasive that the idea of pristine nature has little validity that there is no way of relating to nature without culture 65 Methodology editMain article Historical method nbsp Recording historical eventsUseful guidance on the process of doing environmental history has been given by Donald Worster 66 Carolyn Merchant 67 William Cronon 68 and Ian Simmons 69 Worster s three core subject areas the environment itself human impacts on the environment and human thought about the environment are generally taken as a starting point for the student as they encompass many of the different skills required The tools are those of both history and science with a requirement for fluency in the language of natural science and especially ecology 70 In fact methodologies and insights from a range of physical and social sciences is required there seeming to be universal agreement that environmental history is indeed a multidisciplinary subject Some key works edit Chakrabarti Ranjan ed Does Environmental History Matter Shikar Subsistence Sustenance and the Sciences Kolkata Readers Service 2006 Chakrabarti Ranjan ed Situating Environmental History New Delhi Manohar 2007 Cronon William ed Uncommon Ground Toward Reinventing Nature New York W W Norton amp Company 1995 Dunlap Thomas R Nature and the English Diaspora Environment and History in the United States Canada Australia and New Zealand New York Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 Glacken Clarence Traces on the Rhodian Shore Nature and Culture in Western Thought From Ancient Times to the End of the Nineteenth Century Berkeley University of California Press 1967 Griffiths Tom and Libby Robin eds Ecology and Empire The Environmental History of Settler Societies Keele Keele University Press 1997 Grove Richard Green Imperialism Colonial Expansion Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism 1600 1860 Cambridge University Press 1995 Headrick Daniel Humans Versus Nature A Global Environmental History New York Oxford University Press 2020 Hughes J D An Environmental History of the World Humankind s Changing Role in the Community of Life Oxford Routledge 2001 Hughes J D Global Environmental History The Long View Globalizations Vol 2 No 3 2005 293 208 LaFreniere Gilbert F 2007 The Decline of Nature Environmental History and the Western Worldview Academica Press Bethesda MD ISBN 978 1933146409 MacKenzie John M Imperialism and the Natural World Manchester University Press 1990 McCormick John Reclaiming Paradise The Global Environmental Movement Bloomington Indiana University Press 1989 Rajan Ravi S Modernizing Nature Forestry and Imperial Eco Development 1800 1950 Oxford Oxford University Press 2006 Redclift Michael R Frontier Histories of Civil Society and Nature Cambridge MA The MIT Press 2006 Stevis Dimitris The Globalizations of the Environment Globalizations Vol 2 No 3 2005 323 334 Williams Michael Deforesting the Earth From Prehistory to Global Crisis An Abridgement Chicago University of Chicago Press 2006 White Richard The Organic Machine The Remaking of the Columbia River Hill and Wang 1996 Worster Donald Nature s Economy A Study of Ecological Ideals Cambridge University Press 1977 Zeilinga de Boer Jelle and Donald Theodore Sanders Volcanoes in Human History The Far reaching Effects of Major Eruptions Princeton Princeton University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0691118383Germinal works by region editIn 2004 a theme issue of Environment and History 10 4 provided an overview of environmental history as practiced in Africa the Americas Australia New Zealand China and Europe as well as those with global scope J Donald Hughes 2006 has also provided a global conspectus of major contributions to the environmental history literature George Perkins Marsh Man and Nature or Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action ed David Lowenthal Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 1965 1864 Africa edit nbsp African landscape LesothoAdams Jonathan S and Thomas McShane The Myth of Wild Africa Conservation without Illusion Berkeley University of California Press 1996 266p covers 1900 to 1980s Anderson David Grove Richard Conservation in Africa People Policies amp Practice 1988 355pp Bolaane Maitseo Chiefs Hunters amp Adventurers The Foundation of the Okavango Moremi National Park Botswana Journal of Historical Geography 31 2 April 2005 241 259 Carruthers Jane Africa Histories Ecologies and Societies Environment and History 10 2004 pp 379 406 Cock Jacklyn and Eddie Koch eds Going Green People Politics and the Environment in South Africa Cape Town Oxford University Press 1991 Dovers Stephen Ruth Edgecombe and Bill Guest eds South Africa s Environmental History Cases and Comparisons Athens Ohio University Press 2003 Green Musselman Elizabeth Plant Knowledge at the Cape A Study in African and European Collaboration International Journal of African Historical Studies Vol 36 2003 367 392 Jacobs Nancy J Environment Power and Injustice A South African History Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 Maathai Wangari Green Belt Movement Sharing the Approach and the Experience New York Lantern Books 2003 McCann James Green Land Brown Land Black Land An Environmental History of Africa 1800 1990 Portsmouth Heinemann 1999 Showers Kate B Imperial Gullies Soil Erosion and Conservation in Lesotho 2005 346pp Steyn Phia The lingering environmental impact of repressive governance the environmental legacy of the apartheid era for the new South Africa Globalizations 2 3 2005 391 403Antarctica edit Pyne S J The Ice A Journey to Antarctica University of Iowa Press 1986 Canada edit Further information Bibliography of Canada Geography and environment Dorsey Kurkpatrick The Dawn of Conservation Diplomacy U S Canadian Wildlife Protection Treaties in the Progressive Era Washington University of Washington Press 1998 Loo Tina States of Nature Conserving Canada s Wildlife in the Twentieth Century Vancouver UBC Press 2006 Wynn Graeme Canada and Arctic North America An Environmental History Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 2007 Parr Joy Sensing Changes Technologies Environments and the Everyday 1953 2003 Vancouver UBC Press 2010 United States edit Main article Environmental history of the United States Allitt Patrick A Climate of Crisis America in the Age of Environmentalism 2014 wide ranging scholarly history since 1950s excerpt Andrews Richard N L Managing the Environment Managing Ourselves A History of American Environmental Policy Yale University Press 1999 Bates J Leonard Fulfilling American Democracy The Conservation Movement 1907 to 1921 The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1957 44 1 pp 29 57 in JSTOR Browning Judkin and Timothy Silver An Environmental History of the Civil War 2020 online review Brinkley Douglas G The Wilderness Warrior Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America 2009 excerpt and text search Carson Rachel Silent Spring Cambridge Mass Riverside Press 1962 Cawley R McGreggor Federal Land Western Anger The Sagebrush Rebellion and Environmental Politics 1993 on conservatives Cronon William Changes in the Land Indians Colonists and the Ecology of New England New York Hill and Wang 1983 Cronon William Nature s Metropolis Chicago and the Great West New York W W Norton amp Company 1991 Dant Sara Losing Eden An Environmental History of the American West U of Nebraska Press 2023 online also see online book review Flippen J Brooks Nixon and the Environment 2000 Gottlieb Robert Forcing the Spring The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement Washington Island Press 1993 Hays Samuel P Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency 1959 on Progressive Era Hays Samuel P Beauty Health and Permanence Environmental Politics in the United States 1955 1985 1987 the standard scholarly history Hays Samuel Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890 1920 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1959 Hays Samuel P A History of Environmental Politics since 1945 2000 shorter standard history King Judson The Conservation Fight From Theodore Roosevelt to the Tennessee Valley Authority 2009 Merchant Carolyn American environmental history An introduction Columbia University Press 2007 Merchant Carolyn The Columbia guide to American environmental history Columbia University Press 2012 Merchant Carolyn The Death of Nature Women Ecology and the Scientific Revolution New York Harper amp Row 1980 Nash Roderick The Rights of Nature A History of Environmental Ethics Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1989 Nash Roderick Wilderness and the American Mind 4th ed 2001 the standard intellectual history Rice James D Nature and History in the Potomac Country From Hunter Gatherers to the Age of Jefferson 2009 Sale Kirkpatrick The Green Revolution The American Environmental Movement 1962 1999 New York Hill amp Wang 1993 Scheffer Victor B The Shaping of Environmentalism in America 1991 Stradling David ed Conservation in the Progressive Era Classic Texts Washington University of Washington Press 2004 primary sources Strong Douglas H Dreamers amp Defenders American Conservationists 1988 online edition good biographical studies of the major leaders Turner James Morton The Specter of Environmentalism Wilderness Environmental Politics and the Evolution of the New Right The Journal of American History 96 1 2009 123 47 online at History Cooperative Unger Nancy C Beyond Nature s Housekeepers American Women in Environmental History New York Oxford University Press 2012 Worster Donald Under Western Skies Nature and History in the American West Oxford University Press 1992 Melosi Martin V Coping with Abundance Energy and Environment in Industrial America Temple University Press 1985 Steinberg Ted Down to Earth Nature s Role in American History Oxford University Press 2002 Rothman Hal K 1998 The Greening of a Nation Environmentalism in the United States since 1945 Fort Worth TX Harcourt Brace College Publishers ISBN 0155028553 Latin America and the Caribbean edit Boyer Christopher R Political Landscapes Forests Conservation and Community in Mexico Durham Duke University Press 2015 Dean Warren With Broadax and Firebrand The Destruction of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest Berkeley University of California Press 1995 Funes Monzote Reinaldo From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba An Environmental History since 1492 2008 Matthews Andrew S Instituting Nature Authority Expertise and Power in Mexican Forests Cambridge Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press 2011 Melville Elinor A Plague of Sheep Environmental Consequences of the Conquest of Mexico Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 Miller Shawn William An Environmental History of Latin America 2007 Miller Shawn William Fruitless Trees Portuguese Conservation and Brazil s Colonial Timber Stanford Stanford University Press 2000 Noss Andrew and Imke Oetting Hunter Self Monitoring by the Izoceno Guarani in the Bolivian Chaco Biodiversity amp Conservation 14 11 2005 2679 2693 Raffles Hugh et al Further Reflections on Amazonian Environmental History Transformations of Rivers and Streams Latin American Research Review Vol 38 Number 3 2003 165 187 Santiago Myrna I The Ecology of Oil Environment Labor and the Mexican Revolution 1900 1938 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 Simonian Lane Defending the Land of the Jaguar A History of Conservation in Mexico Austin University of Texas Press 1995 Wakild Emily Revolutionary Parks Conservation Social Justice and Mexico s National Parks 1910 1940 Tucson University of Arizona Press 2012 South and South East Asia edit nbsp Banaue rice terraces in the Philippines where traditional landraces have been grown for thousands of yearsBoomgaard Peter ed Paper Landscapes Explorations in the Environment of Indonesia Leiden KITLV Press 1997 David A amp Guha R eds 1995 Nature Culture Imperialism Essays on the Environmental History of South Asia Delhi India Oxford University Press Fisher Michael An Environmental History of India From Earliest Times to the Twenty First Century Cambridge UP 2018 Gadgil M and R Guha This Fissured Land An Ecological History of India University of California Press 1993 Grove Richard Vinita Damodaran and Satpal Sangwan eds Nature amp the Orient The Environmental History of South and Southeast Asia Oxford University Press 1998 Hill Christopher V South Asia An Environmental History Santa Barbara ABC Clio 2008 Shiva Vandana Stolen Harvest the Hijacking of the Global Food Supply Cambridge MA South End Press 2000 ISBN 0 89608 608 9 Yok shiu Lee and Alvin Y So Asia s Environmental Movements Comparative Perspectives Armonk M E Sharpe 1999 Iqbal Iftekhar The Bengal Delta Ecology State and Social Change 1840 1943 London Palgrave Macmillan 2010 East Asia edit Elvin Mark amp Ts ui jung Liu eds Sediments of Time Environment and Society in Chinese History Cambridge University Press 1998 Totman Conrad D The Green Archipelago Forestry in Preindustrial Japan Berkeley University of California Press 1989 Totman Conrad D Pre industrial Korea and Japan in Environmental Perspective Leiden Brill 2004 Ts ui jung Liu Sediments of Time Environment and Society in Chinese History Cambridge University Press 1998 Liu Ts ui jung and James Beattie eds Environment Modernization and Development in East Asia Perspectives from Environmental History Basingstoke Palgrave Studies in World Environmental History 2016 Tull Malcolm and A R Krishnan Resource Use and Environmental Management in Japan 1890 1990 in J R McNeill ed Environmental History of the Pacific and the Pacific Rim Aldershot Hampshire Ashgate Publishing 2001 Menzie Nicholas Forest and Land Management in Late Imperial China London Macmillan Press 1994 Maohong Bao Environmental History in China Environment and History Volume 10 Number 4 November 2004 pp 475 499 Marks R B Tigers rice silk and silt Environment and economy in late imperial South China Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 Perdue Peter C Lakes of Empire Man and Water in Chinese History Modern China 16 January 1990 119 29 Shapiro Judith Mao s War against Nature Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China New York Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0521786805Middle East and North Africa edit McNeill J R The Eccentricity of the Middle East and North Africa s Environmental History Water on Sand Environmental Histories of the Middle East and North Africa 2013 27 50 Mikhail Alan ed Water on sand Environmental histories of the Middle East and North Africa Oxford University Press 2013 Dursun Selcuk A call for an environmental history of the Ottoman Empire and Turkey Reflections on the fourth ESEH conference New Perspectives on Turkey 37 2007 211 222 Dursun Selcuk Forest and the state history of forestry and forest administration in the Ottoman Empire Unpublished PhD Sabanci University 2007 Mikhail Alan Nature and empire in Ottoman Egypt An environmental history Cambridge University Press 2011 White Sam Rethinking disease in Ottoman history International Journal of Middle East Studies 42 no 4 2010 549 567 Burke III Edmund The Coming Environmental Crisis in the Middle East A Historical Perspective 1750 2000 CE April 27 2005 UC World History Workshop Essays and Positions from the World History Workshop Paper 2 Tal Alon Pollution in a Promised Land An Environmental History of Israel Berkeley University of California Press 2002 Europe edit nbsp Roman aqueduct and plaza Segovia SpainBrimblecombe Peter and Christian Pfister The Silent Countdown Essays in European Environmental History Berlin Springer Verlag 1993 Crosby Alfred W Ecological Imperialism The Biological Expansion of Europe 900 1900 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1986 Christensen Peter Decline of Iranshahr Irrigation and Environments in the History of the Middle East 500 B C to 1500 A D Austin University of Texas Press 1993 Ditt Karl Nature Conservation in England and Germany 1900 1970 Forerunner of Environmental Protection Contemporary European History 5 1 28 Hughes J Donald Pan s Travail Environmental Problems of the Ancient Greeks and Romans Baltimore Johns Hopkins 1994 Hughes J Donald The Mediterranean An Environmental History Santa Barbara ABC Clio 2005 Marti Escayol Maria Antonia La construccio del concepte de natura a la Catalunya moderna Barcelona Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona 2004 71 Netting Robert Balancing on an Alp Ecological Change and Continuity in a Swiss Mountain Community Cambridge University Press 1981 Parmentier Isabelle dir Ledent Carole coll La recherche en histoire de l environnement Belgique Congo Rwanda Burundi Namur 2010 Coll Autres futurs Stephen J Pyne Vestal Fire An Environmental History Told through Fire of Europe and Europe s Encounter with the World Seattle University of Washington Press 1997 Richards John F The Unending Frontier Environmental History of the Early Modern World Berkeley University of California Press 2003 Whited Tamara L ed Northern Europe An Environmental History Santa Barbara ABC Clio 2005 Australia New Zealand amp Oceania edit nbsp Polynesian outrigger canoeBeattie James Empire and Environmental Anxiety Health Science Art and Conservation in South Asia and Australasia 1800 1920 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2011 Beattie James Emily O Gorman and Matt Henry eds Climate Science and Colonization Histories from Australia and New Zealand New York Palgrave Macmillan 2014 Bennett Judith Ann Natives and Exotics World War II and Environment in the Southern Pacific Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2009 Bennett Judith Ann Pacific Forest A History of Resource Control and Contest in Solomon Islands c 1800 1997 Cambridge and Leiden White Horse Press and Brill 2000 Bridgman H A Could climate change have had an influence on the Polynesian migrations Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 41 1983 193 206 Brooking Tom and Eric Pawson Environmental Histories of New Zealand Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 Carron L T A History of Forestry in Australia Canberra 1985 Cassels R The Role of Prehistoric Man in the Faunal Extinctions of New Zealand and other Pacific Islands in Martin P S and Klein R G eds Quaternary Extinctions A Prehistoric Revolution Tucson The University of Arizona Press 1984 D Arcy Paul The People of the Sea Environment Identity and History in Oceania Honolulu University of Hawai i Press 2006 Dargavel John ed Australia and New Zealand Forest Histories Short Overviews Australian Forest History Society Inc Occasional Publications No 1 Kingston Australian Forest History Society 2005 Dovers Stephen ed Essays in Australian Environmental History Essays and Cases Oxford OUP 1994 Dovers Stephen ed Environmental History and Policy Still Settling Australia South Melbourne Oxford University Press 2000 Flannery Tim The Future Eaters An Ecological History of the Australian Lands and People Sydney Reed Books 1994 ISBN 0 8021 3943 4 Garden Don Australia New Zealand and the Pacific An Environmental History Santa Barbara ABC Clio 2005 Hughes J Donald Nature and Culture in the Pacific Islands Leidschrift 21 2006 1 129 144 Hughes J Donald Tahiti Hawaii New Zealand Polynesian impacts on Island Ecosystems in An Environmental History of the World Humankind s Changing Role in the Community of Life London amp New York Routledge 2002 James Beattie Environmental Anxiety in New Zealand 1840 1941 Climate Change Soil Erosion Sand Drift Flooding and Forest Conservation Environment and History 9 2003 379 392 Knight Catherine New Zealand s Rivers An Environmental History Christchurch Canterbury University Press 2016 McNeill John R Of Rats and Men A Synoptic Environmental History of the Island Pacific Journal of World History Vol 5 no 2 299 349 Pyne Stephen Burning Bush A Fire History of Australia New York Henry Holt 1991 Robin Libby Defending the Little Desert The Rise of Ecological Consciousness in Australia Melbourne MUP 1998 Robin Libby How a Continent Created a Nation Sydney University of New South Wales Press 2007 Robin Libby The Flight of the Emu A Hundred Years of Australian Ornithology 1901 2001 Melbourne Melbourne University Press 2000 Smith Mike Hesse Paul eds 23 Degrees S Archaeology and Environmental History of the Southern Deserts Canberra National Museum of Australia Press 2005 Star Paul New Zealand Environmental History A Question of Attitudes Environment and History 9 2003 463 475 Young Ann R M Environmental Change in Australia since 1788 Oxford University Press 2000 Young David Our Islands Our Selves A History of Conservation in New Zealand Dunedin Otago University Press 2004 United Kingdom edit Beinart William and Lotte Hughes Environment and Empire Oxford 2007 Clapp Brian W An Environmental History of Britain Since the Industrial Revolution London 1994 excerpt Grove Richard Green Imperialism Colonial Expansion Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism 1600 1860 Cambridge 1994 Lambert Robert Contested Mountains Cambridge 2001 Mosley Stephen The Chimney of the World A History of Smoke Pollution in Victorian and Edwardian Manchester White Horse 2001 Porter Dale The Thames Embankment Environment Technology and Society in Victorian London University of Akron 1998 Simmonds Ian G Environmental History of Great Britain from 10 000 Years Ago to the Present Edinburgh 2001 Sheail John An Environmental History of Twentieth Century Britain Basingstoke 2002 Thorsheim Peter Inventing Pollution Coal Smoke and Culture in Britain since 1800 Ohio University 2006 Future edit nbsp Old and new human uses of the atmosphereEnvironmental history like all historical studies shares the hope that through an examination of past events it may be possible to forge a more considered future In particular a greater depth of historical knowledge can inform environmental controversies and guide policy decisions The subject continues to provide new perspectives offering cooperation between scholars with different disciplinary backgrounds and providing an improved historical context to resource and environmental problems There seems little doubt that with increasing concern for our environmental future environmental history will continue along the path of environmental advocacy from which it originated as human impact on the living systems of the planet bring us no closer to utopia but instead to a crisis of survival 72 with key themes being population growth climate change conflict over environmental policy at different levels of human organization extinction biological invasions the environmental consequences of technology especially biotechnology the reduced supply of resources most notably energy materials and water Hughes comments that environmental historians will find themselves increasingly challenged by the need to explain the background of the world market economy and its effects on the global environment Supranational instrumentalities threaten to overpower conservation in a drive for what is called sustainable development but which in fact envisions no limits to economic growth 73 Hughes also notes that environmental history is notably absent from nations that most adamantly reject US or Western influences 74 Michael Bess sees the world increasingly permeated by potent technologies in a process he calls artificialization which has been accelerating since the 1700s but at a greatly accelerated rate after 1945 Over the next fifty years this transformative process stands a good chance of turning our physical world and our society upside down Environmental historians can play a vital role in helping humankind to understand the gale force of artifice that we have unleashed on our planet and on ourselves 75 Against this background environmental history can give an essential perspective offering knowledge of the historical process that led to the present situation give examples of past problems and solutions and an analysis of the historical forces that must be dealt with 76 or as expressed by William Cronon The viability and success of new human modes of existing within the constraints of the environment and its resources requires both an understanding of the past and an articulation of a new ethic for the future 77 Related journals editKey journals in this field include Environment and History Environmental History co published by the American Society for Environmental History and Forest History Society Global Environment A Journal of History and Natural and Social Sciences International Review of Environmental HistorySee also edit2020s in environmental history nbsp History portal nbsp Environment portalAmerican Society for Environmental History Conservation Movement Conservation in the United States Ecosemiotics Environmental history of Latin America List of environmental history topics Network in Canadian History and Environment Rachel Carson Center for Environment and SocietyReferences edit MacEachern amp Turkel 2009 p xii Worster 1988 p 293 a b Grove 1994 Nash 1970 pp 249 260 Nash 1972 p 362 Samuel P Hays on National Forests and Ecology History for the Future Pittsburgh WRCT Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Gambino Megan 4 October 2011 Alfred W Crosby on the Columbian Exchange smithsonianmag com The Smithsonian Retrieved 10 February 2015 a b McNeill 2003 pp 5 43 White 1985 Hughes 2006 Dovers 1994 p 4 Worster 1988 p 289 a b c Hughes 2001 p 4 Hughes 2006 p 1 a b c Worster 1988 p 290 Worster 1988 p 292 Worster 1993 p 20 a b Worster 1988 p 306 Dovers 1994 p 5 a b Hughes 2008 p 8 Hughes 2008 p 5 Hughes 2008 p 3 Worster 1988 pp 289 308 a b c Warde amp Sorlin 2007 Hughes 2006 pp 53 92 Krech McNeill amp Merchant 2003 Hughes 2006 pp 53 93 Dovers 1994 p 14 Hughes 2006 p 78 Hughes 2006 pp 18 35 Hughes 2006 p 21 McNeill J R The Historiography of Environmental History PDF World Environmental History Retrieved 1 February 2018 Eddy Matthew Daniel 2008 The Language of Mineralogy John Walker Chemistry and the Edinburgh Medical School 1750 1800 Ashgate McNeill 2003 Rome Adam Conservation Preservation and Environmental Activism A Survey of the Historical Literature Retrieved 8 August 2010 Hughes 2001 p 5 Winks Robin ed 1999 The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume V Historiography OUP Oxford pp 664 65 ISBN 9780191647697 Madhav Gadgil and Ramachandra Guha This fissured land an ecological history of India 1993 MacKenzie John M 1997 The empire of nature Hunting conservation and British Imperialism Barton Gregory 2001 Empire forestry and the origins of environmentalism Journal of Historical Geography 27 4 529 552 doi 10 1006 jhge 2001 0353 Beattie James February 2012 Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire History Compass 10 2 129 139 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2011 00824 x Beinart William Hughes Lotte 2007 Environment and empire Beattie James Melillo Edward O Gorman Emily 2014 Rethinking the British Empire through eco cultural networks materialist cultural environmental history relational connections and agency Environment and History 20 4 561 575 doi 10 3197 096734014X14091313617406 NiCHE Website Oosthoek K Jan What is Environmental History Retrieved 8 August 2010 RCC Website Environment amp Society Portal Website Bess et al 2005 pp 30 109 Martinez Alier amp Schandl 2002 pp 175 176 Warde amp Sorlin 2007 pp 107 130 Hughes 2006 pp 2 3 Marsh 1965 p 15 Grove 1992 pp 42 47 Opie 1983 pp 8 16 Worster 1993 Hurley Andrew 1995 Environmental Inequalities Class Race and Industrial Pollution in Gary Indiana 1945 1980 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0807845183 Islam S Nazrul Climate Change and Social Inequality PDF UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs Jason L Newton Mining in the West Knowing Nature through Uncertainty and the Problem of the Declensionist Narrative in Environmental History H Net Reviews H SHGAPE June 2014 Will Sarvis Embracing Philanthropic Environmentalism the Grand Responsibility of Stewardship Jefferson NC McFarland Pubs 2019 50 54 Hughes 2006 pp 98 99 Dovers 1994 pp 14 16 Hughes 2006 p 5 Hughes 2006 p 97 White 2001 p 55 Cronon 1995 Worster 1988 pp 289 387 Merchant 2002 Cronon 1995 pp 1347 1376 Simmons 1993 Hughes 2008 p 6 TRX TDR redirect Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2011 Hughes 2006 p 125 Hughes 2006 pp 92 93 Hughes 2006 p 75 Bess 2005 Hughes 2006 p 126 See Cronon quote here Searchworks stanford edu Retrieved 3 January 2014 Bibliography editGlobal edit Barton Gregory A 2002 Empire Forestry and the Origins of Environmentalism Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511493621 ISBN 9780511493621 covers British Empire Beattie James Melillo Edward O Gorman Emily eds 2015 Eco cultural Networks and the British Empire New Views on Environmental History New York and London Bloomsbury ISBN 9781441109835 Bolton Geoffrey 1981 Spoils and Spoilers Australians Make Their Environment 1788 1980 Allen amp Unwin p 197 ISBN 9780868612188 Clover Charles 2004 The End of the Line How overfishing is changing the world and what we eat London Ebury Press ISBN 0 09 189780 7 Guha Ramachandra 1999 Environmentalism A Global History Pearson Education ISBN 978 0321011695 Headrick Daniel R 2020 Humans Versus Nature A Global Environmental History New York Oxford University Press Jones Eric L 1991 The History of Natural Resource Exploitation in the Western World Research in Economic History Supplement 6 235 252 Krech Shepard McNeill John R amp Merchant Carolyn 2003 Encyclopaedia of World Environmental History Vol 1 3 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 93732 0 McNeill John R 2001 Something New Under the Sun An Environmental History of the Twentieth Century World Global Century Series New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 32183 8 Ponting Clive 2007 A New Green History of the World The Environment and the Collapse of Great Civilizations Revised ed London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 303898 6 Richards J F 2003 The Unending Frontier An Environmental History of the Early Modern World University of California Press ISBN 9780520246782 Simmons Ian G 1993 Environmental History A Concise Introduction Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 55786 445 4 Simmons I G 1996 Changing the Face of the Earth Culture Environment History 2nd ed Blackwell Takacs Santa A 2004 The major transitions in the history of human transformation of the biosphere Human Ecology Review 11 51 66 Uekotter Frank The Vortex An Environmental History of the Modern World University of Pittsburgh Press 20230 online book review Williams Michael 2003 Deforesting the Earth From Prehistory to Global Crisis University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226899473 Asia amp Middle East edit Biggs David 2011 Quagmire Nation Building and Nature in the Mekong Delta University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0295991993 Economy Elizabeth 2010 The River Runs Black The Environmental Challenge to China s Future Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801459443 Elvin Mark 2006 The Retreat of the Elephants An Environmental History of China Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300119930 Gadgil Madhav Guha Ramachandra 1993 This Fissured Land An Ecological History of India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 807744 2 Grove Richard H Damodaran Vinita Sangwan Satpal eds 1998 Nature and the Orient The Environmental History of South and Southeast Asia Oxford University Press p 1036 ISBN 9780195653755 Johnson Erik W Saito Yoshitaka Nishikido Makoto November 2009 Organizational Demography of Japanese Environmentalism Sociological Inquiry 79 4 481 504 doi 10 1111 j 1475 682X 2009 00304 x Shapiro Judith 2001 Mao s War against Nature Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511512063 ISBN 9780511512063 Mikhail Alan ed 2013 Water on Sand Environmental Histories of the Middle East and North Africa Oxford University Press p 326 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199768677 001 0001 ISBN 9780199768677 scholarly essays on plague and environment in late Ottoman Egypt the rise and fall of environmentalism in Lebanon the politics of water in the making of Saudi Arabia etc Peluso Nancy Lee 1992 Rich Forests Poor People Resource Control and Resistance in Java Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press doi 10 1525 california 9780520073777 001 0001 ISBN 9780520073777 Thapar Valmik 1998 Land of the Tiger A Natural History of the Indian Subcontinent BBC Books p 288 ISBN 978 0563371793 Europe and Russia edit Bonhomme Brian Forests Peasants and Revolutionaries Forest Conservation amp Organization in Soviet Russia 1917 1929 2005 252pp Campopiano M Evolution of the Landscape and the Social and Political Organisation of Water Management the Po Valley in the Middle Ages Fifth to Fourteenth Centuries in Borger de Kraker Soens Thoen and Tys Landscapes or seascapes CORN 13 2013 313 332 1 Cioc Mark The Rhine An Eco Biography 1815 2000 2002 Clapp Brian William An environmental history of Britain since the industrial revolution Routledge 2014 Dryzek John S et al Green states and social movements environmentalism in the United States United Kingdom Germany and Norway Oxford UP 2003 Hoffmann Richard An Environmental History of Medieval Europe 2014 Luckin Bill and Peter Thorsheim eds A Mighty Capital under Threat The Environmental History of London 1800 2000 U of Pittsburgh Press 2020 online review Smout T Christopher Nature contested environmental history in Scotland and Northern England since 1600 2000 Thorsheim Peter Inventing Pollution Coal Smoke and Culture in Britain since 1800 2009 Uekotter Frank The greenest nation A new history of German environmentalism Mit Press 2014 Warren Charles R Managing Scotland s environment 2002 Weiner Douglas R Models of Nature Ecology Conservation and Cultural Revolution in Soviet Russia 2000 324pp covers 1917 to 1939 Whyte Ian D 2004 Landscape and History since 1500 Reaktion Books ISBN 9781861894533 Historiography edit Arndt Melanie Environmental History Version 3 in Docupedia Zeitgeschichte 23 August 2016 Beattie James Recent Themes in the Environmental History of the British Empire History Compass Feb 2012 10 2 pp 129 139 Bess Michael Mark Cioc and James Sievert Environmental History Writing in Southern Europe Environmental History 5 2000 pp 545 56 Bess Michael Bess M Giles Vernick T Gugliotta A Guha R Hall M Igler D Jones S D et al 2005 Anniversary Forum What Next for Environmental History Environmental History 10 1 30 109 doi 10 1093 envhis 10 1 30 Bess Michael 2005 Artificialization and its Discontents Environmental History 10 1 5 para Cioc Mark Bjorn Ola Linner and Matt Osborn Environmental History Writing in Northern Europe Environmental History 5 2000 pp 396 406 Coates Peter Emerging from the Wilderness or from Redwoods to Bananas Recent Environmental History in the United States and the Rest of the Americas Environment and History 10 2004 pp 407 38 Conway Richard The Environmental History of Colonial Mexico History Compass 2017 15 7 DOI 10 1111 hic3 12388 Cronon William ed 1995 Uncommon Ground Toward Reinventing Nature New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 03872 6 Dovers Stephen ed 1994 Essays in Australian Environmental History Essays and Cases Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 553482 4 Febvre Lucien 1925 A Geographical Introduction to History New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 7103 0844 2 Grove Richard H 1992 Origins of Western Environmentalism Scientific American 267 1 42 47 Bibcode 1992SciAm 267a 42G doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0792 42 Grove Richard 1994 Green Imperialism Colonial Expansion Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism 1600 1860 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56513 8 Haq Gary and Alistair Paul Environmentalism since 1945 Routledge 2013 Hay Peter Main Currents in Western Environmental Thought 2002 standard scholarly history excerpt and text search Hughes J Donald 2001 An Environmental History of the World Humankind s Changing Role in the Community of Life Routledge Studies in Physical Geography and Environment London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 13619 8 Hughes J Donald 2006 What is Environmental History What is History Series Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 3189 9 Hughes J Donald 2008 Three Dimensions of Environmental History Environment and History 14 3 1 12 doi 10 3197 096734008X333545 Huxley Thomas H 1863 Man s Place in Nature New York 2003 Dover ISBN 978 0 486 43273 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link McNeill John R 2003 Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History History and Theory 42 1 5 43 doi 10 1046 j 1468 2303 2003 00255 x MacEachern Alan Turkel William J eds 2009 Method amp Meaning in Canadian Environmental History Toronto Nelson Education ISBN 978 0 17 644116 6 Mancall Peter C Pigs for Historians Changes in the Land and Beyond William and Mary Quarterly 2010 67 2 pp 347 375 in JSTOR Marsh George P 1965 1864 Lowenthal David ed Man and Nature or Physical Geography as Modified by Human Action Cambridge Ma Belknap Press of Harvard University Martinez Alier J Schandl H 2002 Introduction Special Section European Environmental History and Ecological Economics Ecological Economics 41 2 175 176 doi 10 1016 S0921 8009 02 00033 2 McNeill J R 2010 The State of the Field of Environmental History Annual Review of Environment and Resources 35 345 374 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 040609 105431 Merchant Carolyn 2002 The Columbia Guide to American Environmental History New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 11233 8 Melosi Martin V 2010 Humans Cities and Nature How Do Cities Fit in the Material World Journal of Urban History 36 1 3 21 doi 10 1177 0096144209349876 S2CID 145481490 Mosley Stephen Common Ground Integrating Social and Environmental History Journal of Social History Volume 39 Number 3 Spring 2006 pp 915 933 relation to Social history Nash Roderick 1970 The State of Environmental History In Bass H J ed The State of American History Chicago Organization of American Historians and Quadrangle Books ISBN 0 585 09291 5 Nash Roderick 1972 American Environmental History A New Teaching Frontier Pacific Historical Review 41 3 362 372 doi 10 2307 3637864 JSTOR 3637864 Opie John 1983 Environmental History Pitfalls and Opportunities Environmental Review 7 1 8 16 doi 10 2307 envrev 7 1 8 S2CID 155741133 Robin Libby and Tom Griffiths Environmental History in Australasia Environment and History 10 2004 pp 439 74 Warde Paul amp Sorlin Sverker 2007 The Problem of the Problem of Environmental History A Re reading of the Field and its Purpose Environmental History 12 1 107 130 doi 10 1093 envhis 12 1 107 Sedrez Lise 2011 Environmental History of Modern Latin America in A Companion to Latin American History ed Thomas H Holloway Wiley Blackwell Uekotter Frank 2004 The Old Conservation History and the New An Argument for Fresh Perspectives on an Established Topic Historical Social Research 29 3 171 191 Wakild Emily 2011 Environment and Environmentalism in A Companion to Mexican History and Culture William H Beezley ed Wiley Blackwell Warde Paul amp Sorlin Sverker 2009 Nature s End History and the Environment London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 20346 4 White Richard 1985 Environmental History The Development of a New Historical Field Pacific Historical Review 54 3 297 335 doi 10 2307 3639634 JSTOR 3639634 White Richard 2001 Environmental History Retrospect and Prospect Pacific Historical Review 70 1 55 57 doi 10 1525 phr 2001 70 1 55 Worster Donald ed 1988 The Ends of the Earth Perspectives on Modern Environmental History Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34846 3 Worster Donald 1993 The Wealth of Nature Environmental History and the Ecological Imagination Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509264 3 Further reading editBiasillo Roberta Claudio de Majo eds Storytelling and Environmental History Experiences from Germany and Italy RCC Perspectives Transformations in Environment and Society 2020 no 2 doi org 10 5282 rcc 9116 Hall Marcus and Patrick Kupper eds Crossing Mountains The Challenges of Doing Environmental History RCC Perspectives 2014 no 4 doi org 10 5282 rcc 6510 Mauch Christof Notes From the Greenhouse Making the Case for Environmental History RCC Perspectives 2013 no 6 doi org 10 5282 rcc 5661 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Environmental history PodcastsJan W Oosthoek podcasts on many aspects of the subject including interviews with eminent environmental historians Nature s Past Canadian Environmental History Podcast features monthly discussions about the environmental history research community in Canada EnvirohistNZ Podcast is a podcast that looks at the environmental history of New Zealand Institutions amp resourcesInternational Consortium of Environmental History Organizations ICE HO Oosthoek K J W What is environmental history Historiographies of different countries H Environment web resource for students of environmental history American Society for Environmental History European Society for Environmental History Environmental History Now Environmental History Resources Environmental History Timeline Environmental History on the Internet Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society and its Environment amp Society Portal Forest History Society Australian and New Zealand Environmental History Network Brazilian Environmental History Network Centre for Environmental History at the Australian National University Network in Canadian History and the Environment Centre for World Environmental History University of Sussex Croatian journal for environmental history in croatian english german and slovenian Environmental History Virtual Library Environmental History Top News Environmental History Mobile Application Project HistoricalClimatology com Explores climate history a form of environmental history Climate History Network Network of climate historians Environment amp Society Portal Turkish Society for Environmental History Archived 2015 08 17 at the Wayback MachineJournalsJSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Environmental History 1996 2007 Volumes 1 12 JSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Forest amp Conservation History 1990 1995 Volumes 34 39 JSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Environmental Review ER 1976 1989 Volumes 1 13 JSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Environmental History Review 1990 1995 Volumes 14 19 JSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Journal of Forest History 1974 1989 Volumes 18 33 JSTOR All Volumes and Issues Browse Forest History 1957 1974 Volumes 1 17 Environment and History Published by White Horse Press with British based Editorial collective Archived 2015 09 17 at the Wayback Machine Environmental History Co published quarterly by the American Society for Environmental History and the US Forest History Society Global Environment A Journal of History and Natural and Social Sciences Published in New Zealand with special regard to the modern and contemporary ages Historia Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribena HALAC Journal of the North Atlantic Economic and Ecohistory Research Journal for Economic and Environmental History Croatia Pacific Historical Review Arcadia Explorations in Environmental History published by the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society and ESEHArticlesThink About NatureVideosNotes from the Field public television episodes on U S environmental history subjects Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Environmental history amp oldid 1206750236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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