Engaging Religion in the Fight for Environmental Justice: Jesuits and Conservation in the Palni Hills of South India
This article introduces a case for engaging with religious worldviews which can support the cause for environmental justice.
This article introduces a case for engaging with religious worldviews which can support the cause for environmental justice.
Previously military fortifications, the barrier islands along the northern Gulf Coast of the United States today protect against climate change.
This article explores the social and ecological legacies of the peat industry in Russia and the different meanings that people attach to peatlands after the end of peat extraction.
The Camargue hut, a traditional dwelling from the southern French wetlands, exemplified the practical environmental wisdom of ordinary people.
This article investigates the origins of the exploitation of sperm whales off the Brazilian coast in the eighteenth century.
This article examines the development of lake Ohrid in Macedonia, and the dilemma between environmental protection and the expansion of mass tourism on the lake’s fragile shores.
Mount Lebanon’s distinctive environmental history accounts for its susceptibility to famine.
A noxious air forces Mexico City to confront its unwavering urbanizing and industrializing mission in the late twentieth century.
Once the largest toxic e-waste dump in the world, government investment in environmentally sustainable recycling has begun to change Guiyu.
When a tornado strikes Worcester, Massachusetts, residents suspect the disaster is the work of an unlikely culprit—the atomic bomb.