“Regimes of Value: Economic Transformations, Ecological Livelihoods, and Salt Cooperatives on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast”
This article investigates changing regimes of value in the salt flats on the southern Bulgarian Black Sea coast.
This article investigates changing regimes of value in the salt flats on the southern Bulgarian Black Sea coast.
In contrast to today’s environmental concerns, the first deep-sea-mining environmental impact assessment, undertaken in the early 1970s, focused on the potential positive side effects.
Full text of Elena Kochetkova’s The Green Power of Socialism: Wood, Forest, and the Making of Soviet Industrially Embedded Ecology, a book on the relationship between nature and humans under state socialism.
Simon Werrett, Carson Fellow from May to September 2011, talks about his research on ‘Recycling and the History of Science and Technology.’
In this Springs article, history of technology professor Nina Wormbs explores how people justify acting unsustainably.
Frank Zelko dives into the history of teeth and shows that today’s teeth are the product of centuries of biocultural evolution.
In view of the escalating environmental crisis, the democratic states of the Global North must ecologically transform their social and constitutional orders.
In the nineteenth century, a water crisis in Rio de Janeiro resulted in the planting of forests, influencing the development of Brazil’s forestry policy and the emergence of tropical forestry.
Ukraine’s Dnipro River and nearby inhabitants have lived through brute-force environmental change and war over the last century.
This essay examines how military, technology, and nature converge in the Israeli griffon vulture project and what politics stand behind it.