Feathering the Multispecies Nest: Green Cities, Convivial Spaces
Rigby reimagines green cities from an interdisciplinary environmental humanities perspective to see how they can also be sites of more-than-human prosperity.
Rigby reimagines green cities from an interdisciplinary environmental humanities perspective to see how they can also be sites of more-than-human prosperity.
Dorothee Brantz and Avi Sharma discuss the history of green urban visions, looking at historical precedents of the modern green city.
This volume explores the potential contribution memory studies can make to policymaking, in particular on conservation and disaster resilience.
Bolton explores how Natural England creates landscape management plans in partnership with local communities.
Farjon et al. explore various narratives of nature and nature policies in the Netherlands.
Simpson explores how both memory and forgetting are central to what happens after disasters.
Lakhani and de Smalen offer key messages for policymakers.
Zhen Wang’s photo essay explores in detail how nearly 40 years of urbanization and rapid economic development have transformed the past, present, and future of the Yi population and of China’s rural and cultural landscapes.
Serenella Iovino uses the garden as a lens to analyze the impacts of old and new forms of aestheticizing nature on the geology of our planet.
This volume explores the question of whether science should be centered in climate-change communication.