Fear and Anxiety on the Energy Frontier: Understanding Women’s Early Encounters with Fossil Fuels in the Home
Looking to rural Canada, the author shows how women’s concerns for family safety drove energy choices and supplier campaigns.
Looking to rural Canada, the author shows how women’s concerns for family safety drove energy choices and supplier campaigns.
This edited radio-show transcript provides personal accounts of women’s experiences in rural Ireland during the transition to electricity.
Dolata brings to light how the conflicts faced by women has shaped their agency in energy transitions.
Helbert raises the issue of justice in energy transitions by looking at the discrimination faced by women in oil regions of Nigeria.
In the first half of the eighteenth century, the Portuguese Atlantic coast was affected by windblown sands moving from the ocean to inland areas.
Extract from Nina Munteanu’s Water is…—a book on the meaning of water.
Beginning in 1915, Greek authorities implemented measures against the nomadic shepherds of southern Macedonia.
In this essay, inaugural issue editors Steven Hartman and Serpil Oppermann introduce the new open-access journal Ecocene.
In this article, Rosi Braidotti explores the relation between posthumanism and the environmental humanities.
In this article, Steven Yearley writes about the problems and possibilities of scholars and scientists issuing warnings to leaders and policy-makers.