“Inequalities in the Land: Colonial Legacies and the Quest for Land Equity in Zimbabwe”
A reflection on the use of images in environmental history.
A reflection on the use of images in environmental history.
This documentary tells the story of the porters in the Eastern Himalayas.
This short film documents the experience of the RCC Landhaus fellows in 2023 and 2024.
In a combination of different genres, this book accounts for life and environment along the Delaware River.
Kevin Kelly presents his perspectives on technology and its relevance to history, biology, and religion.
Energy innovator Amory Lovins shows how to get the United States off oil and coal by 2050 cheaply and easily, by integrating sectors as well as innovations.
Former RCC Fellow Helen Rozwadowski presents her perspectives on the ocean and its history.
The article shows how ecological and geographical features influence the configuration of political space within a region.
Ecoanxiety in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein signals our ability to create art in reaction to environmental disaster in increasingly unstable planetary futures.
This review of Human Extinction and the Pandemic Imaginary, published by Christos Lynteris on the brink of the COVID-19 epidemic, problematises the tension between a dominant pandemic imaginary, perpetuated by outbreak preparedness policies and the media, and an emergent imaginary, historically and geographically.