

This artistic contribution explores sensory engagement with contamination caused by oil-waste pits in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
Joseph Adeniran Adedeji shows how the cultural meaning of Yoruba heritage sites signify hope for a harmonious coexistence between society and the nonhuman world.
This essay brings previously underexplored paths of political ecology, environmental history, and even biosemiotics and plant neurophysiology in Italo Calvino’s The Baron in the Trees (1957) to light.
This essay examines how military, technology, and nature converge in the Israeli griffon vulture project and what politics stand behind it.
Ukraine’s Dnipro River and nearby inhabitants have lived through brute-force environmental change and war over the last century.
One of our editors, Brady Fauth, sits down with anthropologist Francesca Mezzenzana to discuss her developing research into children’s human–nonhuman relationships across cultures.
Jenny Price argues the efficacy of alt-institution public art projects for environmental humanities practitioners and uses examples from her own practice and beyond.
In view of the escalating environmental crisis, the democratic states of the Global North must ecologically transform their social and constitutional orders.
Frank Zelko dives into the history of teeth and shows that today’s teeth are the product of centuries of biocultural evolution.
This article investigates changing regimes of value in the salt flats on the southern Bulgarian Black Sea coast.