Climate Change and the Industrial Revolution: Informing Policy through History, Memory, and Literature
Goodbody examines the literary work Pandaemonium and its role in a research project to promote debate on climate change.
Goodbody examines the literary work Pandaemonium and its role in a research project to promote debate on climate change.
Farjon et al. explore various narratives of nature and nature policies in the Netherlands.
Parrinello examines historical responses to Italian earthquakes.
Baez Ullberg presents examples of disaster recovery scenarios from Argentina and Sweden.
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.
This essay explores the possibility of “slow hope” for positive environmental change.
This volume of Perspectives offers case studies of energy transitions within everyday environments over the last two centuries, from Europe to South Asia, to North and Latin America.
Taylor and Chappells examine changing material cultures of energy in Britain and Canada.