An interdisciplinary journal bringing scholars in the humanities and biological sciences together, to develop perspectives on current environmental problems.
White Horse Press has stopped posting on this platform. You can find us in the other place, along with Global Environment and Plant Perspectives. Please find and follow our new accounts on b.l.u.e.s.k.y. via the WHP starter pack #solidarity#envhist#transhumance#plantstudies
Our bumper, 30th-anniversary issue comprises 5 commissioned articles, 2 snapshots and 4 research articles, exploring (among many other topics) banana disease, flooding in medieval and early modern flooding Hull and multi-species toxic histories! #envhist
https://t.co/z32bRSbThC
Issue 3 is online, including 3 Snapshots. Behind the cover this time: environmental history travels to outer space, we explore rhino preservation in India, Canberra’s green infrastructure, Californian gray whales and Sweden’s Lodgepole Pine! Enjoy!
https://t.co/KGbXftdHmp
We've published a new #openaccess fast track article in 'The Journal of Population and Sustainability', A.M. Amankwah et. al on 'Evaluation of Circular Srategies and their Effectiveness in Fashion SMEs in Ghana' – online here: https://t.co/hhapFLLG6t #fashion#ghana
We’ve published 4 new #openaccess items in ‘Plant Perspectives’: poems by Evgenia Emets and Christopher Konrad; Isabella Clarke's narrative non-fiction ‘Conversations with Trees’; and Merve Ünsal's commentary about her audio work, ‘Into the Wind’. https://t.co/Q4gW2SYFTy #envhum
We’ve published two new ‘fast track’ #OpenAccess research articles in ‘Plant Perspectives’: ‘Poppies and Women Under the Linden Tree in a Slovak Village’ and ‘Alien Plants between Practices and Representations’. Both online here: https://t.co/Q4gW2SYFTy #envhum#plants#envhist
DEEP NEWS! H-Oceans launched today! If you'd like to be part of a community of scholars who consider the volumetric, global oceans as a site of historical inquiry in the humanities and social sciences, please join (and pass the word): https://t.co/J0x0F2D54M
Three exceptional PhD theses resulting from our NUCLEAR WATERS project, written by my brilliant doctoral students @AKluppelberg@Siegfriedevens and most recently Alicia Gutting. They are available online.
A new E&H fast track article in E&H available online:
Robert Tiphaine’s ‘Political Acceptance of Dangerous Technology: The Example of Leaded Petrol through the Case Study of Switzerland (1921–1970)’
https://t.co/PHVjEiySdt
https://t.co/9Y1VKDIDVy
The 2nd issue of 2024’s Environment and History is hot off the press today! Hear the lyrebirds, listen to the voices of river-dwelling sex workers, explore the environmental legacies of WW1’s Eastern Front, bogs, borderlands, wild fires and much more 😃🌏
The first 2024 issue of Environment and History is hot off the press, including a bumper collection of three shorter Snapshots articles: https://t.co/iu0BAKuFjH
Please see our 2024 call for shorter “snapshots” articles (2,000 words) on the topics listed below. It’s a great opportunity to introduce yourself to your field as an Early Career Researcher. It’s also a platform for more established academics to present shorter case studies 😎
We’re delighted to share with you all the latest and last of 2023’s E&H issues, featuring three Snapshots and five full-length articles. All buzzing with relevance and rigour! Fill your Monday morning with sand, forests, wolves, water and the senses: https://t.co/udlS3NHxkk
#stone#fishweir, #Burnie. #Tasmania has been inhabited by # indigenous #aboriginal people over 42,000 years. The brought the #fishweir methods with them from mainland #Australia. Several 100 sites have been identified along is coastline dating from prehistory onwards. 1/8
The Call for the 3rd Annual Conference of the DFF Research Network for Global Justice and the Environmental Humanities is out! All details here: https://t.co/7xKjMGUWdo #EHJustice2023#EHJustice#envhum
We are thrilled to announce the winners of our inaugural Environmental History Book Prize.
Judges Grace Karskens & Eric Pawson have awarded the prize jointly to Lucy Mackintosh for Shifting Grounds & @OGormanEmily for Wetlands in a Dry Land
#envhist
https://t.co/wF1mRsRCfV