Small-Scale Fisheries versus Whale-Watching Tourism: The Story of Puerto López
This article addresses the social implications of fishers leaving activities connected with small-scale fisheries, with an emphasis on food sovereignty.
This article addresses the social implications of fishers leaving activities connected with small-scale fisheries, with an emphasis on food sovereignty.
Engineering the Lower Shinano River in northeastern Japan expanded the risk of other flood and tsunami damage.
The urbanization of Bangalore transformed the once-strong relationship between communities and the lakes that they once created and maintained.
Coral scientists are dealing with an existential crisis and are divided between hope and despair in their approaches to coral conservation.
Previously military fortifications, the barrier islands along the northern Gulf Coast of the United States today protect against climate change.
This article focuses on the contingent practices that constitute oyster aquaculture in contemporary Japan and the multiple forms of more-than-human entanglements that emerge as a result.
Historical documents provide detailed descriptions of ice-jam flood events and climate impacts in riverine communities.
The sea gives and the sea takes away. The story of the submerged forest at Redcar, England.
Environmental activism in the 1960s forced the Army Corps of Engineers to limit the open-water dumping of dredge spoils in the Great Lakes and create new “natural” areas along the shore.