Ahead of new print alert! You can now read John Kanbayashi's "Watershed Protection as Dispossession in Japanese-Occupied Taiwan" from the April 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/1wmgkhzqLS
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Jaeyoung Ha's "'A Good Tree Is a Fast-Growing Tree': South Korea’s Reforestation in the 1950s and the Making of Cold War Ecology in East Asia" from the April 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/fyzXvTldzb
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Paul Ocobock's "Insect Safari: Invading Species and Transimperial Science in Kenya" from the April 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/FZmplLFBSd
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Jake Subryan Richards' "Ecologies in Flight: Black Environmental Knowledge and Human-Bird Interactions Between the Caribbean and Britain" from the April 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/xrDHfqhU0e
This article from Environmental History explores the overlooked history of the first world's fair for the environment and its contribution to the corporate capture of environmental messaging. Read more: https://t.co/iEwj17JRo5 @EnvHistJournal
Congratulations to Molly Warsh for winning the Leopold-Hidy Award for the article "Seasonal Harvests: Migration, Reproduction, and Religion in the Early Modern Spanish Tuna Fisheries." @ChicagoJournals has taken down the paywall to the article:
https://t.co/JxbeIRJgj7
Join us at the American Society for Environmental History conference in Kansas City, MO to learn about Environmental History, our other journals, and to grab some giveaways. Can’t make it in person? Discover our history journals: https://t.co/udAJN61bLC @EnvHistJournal@ASEH_org
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Camden Burd's Gallery Essay "Playing Gaia: Simulation, Science, and the Significance of Video Games for Environmental History" from the January 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/ySOdYoIsSB
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Sophie Brockmann's (@Brockmann_S) "Heritage and Environment: Archaeology at a United Fruit Company Site, 1909–1939" from the January 2026 issue. #evnhist#envhum
https://t.co/r8c74kRaav
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Megan Ann Black's "The 'Eco-Phony' World’s Fair: Expo ’74 and the Bind of Being Friends of the Earth" from the January 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum#environmentalism
https://t.co/9szr13gMwN
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Mathijs Boom and Jip van Besouw's "Rising Seas, Sinking Lands: Reckoning with Local and Global Sea Level in the Early Modern Netherlands" from the January 2026 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/gL9TaEl8Ud
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read @WaterThe_Planet (Ruth Gamble) and Hongzhang Xu's "Colonizing the Lu’s Realm: How Lowland Aquacultures Transformed the Upper Brahmaputra’s Waters in the Twentieth Century" from the January 2026 issue. #envhist
https://t.co/99dtDuBr6V
Our October 2025 issue is now available! If you are a print subscriber look for it in the mail! #envhist#envhum@ChicagoJournals
https://t.co/KjEiSF5mSH
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Elsa Devienne's "Making Plastics Count: Citizen Science Beach Cleanups and the Ocean Plastic Pollution Crisis (1980s–2020s)" from the October 2025 issue. #envhist#envhum#pollution
https://t.co/bs1ftCtJow
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Samuel J. Klee's "Drawing Barbed Wire: The Tule Lake Scrapbook of 1942" from the October 2025 issue. #envhist#envhum
https://t.co/4vtf5fzJgD
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Max Chervin Bridge's "Still a Silent World: Fish Ears, Whale Politics, and the Science of Ocean Noise, 1941–1990" from the October 2025 issue. #envhist#envhum#oceanhistory#sensoryhistory#animalhistory
https://t.co/YqD6PrXTbE
Ahead of new print alert! You can now read Sabujkoli Mukherjee's "Muddy Lines and Murky Waters: The Making of a Colonial Deltaic Forest, 1816–1828" from the October 2025 issue. #envhist#envhum#foresthistory#IndianHistory
https://t.co/Zy6Yab47qX