International Review of Environmental History: Volume 5, Issue 2, 2019
Edited by: James BeattiePlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
International Review of Environmental History takes an interdisciplinary and global approach to environmental history. It encourages scholars to think big and to tackle the challenges of writing environmental histories across different methodologies, nations, and time-scales. The journal embraces interdisciplinary, comparative and transnational methods, while still recognising the importance of locality in understanding these global processes.
The journal's goal is to be read across disciplines, not just within history. It publishes on all thematic and geographic topics of environmental history, but especially encourage articles with perspectives focused on or developed from the southern hemisphere and the ‘global south’.
Details
- ISSN (print):
- 2205-3204
- ISSN (online):
- 2205-3212
- Publication date:
- Nov 2019
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/IREH.05.02.2019
- Journal:
- International Review of Environmental History
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: History; Science: Earth & Marine Sciences, Environmental Sciences; Social Sciences: Politics & International Studies
- Countries:
- Australia; Africa: Zimbabwe; South Asia: India
PDF Chapters
International Review of Environmental History: Volume 5, Issue 2, 2019 »
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- Preliminary pages (PDF, 0.2MB)
- Introduction (PDF, 0.1MB) – James Beattie doi
- A silenced spring? Exploring Africa’s ‘Rachel Carson moment’: A socio-environmental history of the pesticides in tobacco production in Southern Rhodesia, 1945–80 (PDF, 0.6MB) – Elijah Doro and Sandra Swart doi
- Biofuels’ unbalanced equations: Misleading statistics, networked knowledge and measured parameters: Part 2. Networks, consensus and power (PDF, 0.2MB) – Kate B. Showers doi
- ‘The Way of the Rain’: Towards a conceptual framework for the retrospective examination of historical American and Australian ‘rain follows the plow/plough’ messages (PDF, 0.5MB) – Susan E. Swanberg doi
- Tiger huntresses in the Company Raj: Environmentalism and exotic imaginings of wildlife, 1830–45 (PDF, 0.1MB) – Vijaya Ramadas Mandala doi
- Adam Smith, natural extraction and historical judgement: An unwarranted environmental legacy (PDF, 0.1MB) – James Cullis doi
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