SOLCHA: La Sociedad Latinoamericana y Caribeña de Historia Ambiental
SOLCHA is a society for Latin American and Carribean perspectives on environmental history.
SOLCHA is a society for Latin American and Carribean perspectives on environmental history.
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.
This edited volume takes the reader on an intellectual journey at the frontlines across global South and global North where climate breakdown meets social innovations.
This essay examines how military, technology, and nature converge in the Israeli griffon vulture project and what politics stand behind it.
A monograph on desert dystopias and the environmental origins of apartheid.
Explore the Moon, the world, and the self in a lyrical essay with author Christopher Cokinos.
The surprising career of the advertising slogan “everybody talks about the weather” is a story about political transformation.
In this book, Lida Maxwell shows how Silent Springs stands as a monument to a unique, loving relationship between Rachel Carson and Dorothy Freeman, and how such love underpins a new environmental politics.
In this issue of Earth First! Journal the editors express their thoughts and ideas on life and the journal, Gavin Edwards gives an update on the Nuxalk Nation’s protests against logging in British Columbia, and Mary Brook and Orin Langelle call for attention to the rain forests of Nicaragua.
Melinda Laituri, Carson fellow from February to May 2011, talks about her research project, “Integrated Environmental History of Watersheds,” a comparative, historical-geographical analysis of the Danube and the Colorado rivers.