In current environmental discourse, disposal does not remove and destroy waste but rather transforms it into something useful or harmful and/or re-locates it. This article shows how this operates when the ‘waste’ comprises human remains, specifically how innovative ‘dispersal’ practices are now challenging the ‘disposal’ discourse of nineteenth-century burial and twentieth-century cremation which contained the dead within special death spaces separated from everyday environments for living. Since the 1990s, disposal practices have been supplemented by practices with an entirely different rationale. Instead of containing the dead in safe, out of the way places, new practices disperse human remains back into environments that sustain the livi...
This article draws on data from a qualitative study of the destinations of ashes now being removed i...
Nearly 80 million baby boomers are approaching the end of their lives. Being more environmentally co...
Most conservation scientists and practitioners are unaware that their corpses can transform into pro...
Abstract Methods for preparing and burying the dead vary widely across time and cultures, but an end...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Mortality on January 2...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associate...
The subject of to-night's paper is perhaps a somewhat sad one, and appeals largely to the sentiment...
The argument of this thesis is that corpse disposal in England is a production process where value i...
The rise of natural burials has not been without controversy. Traditionalist funeralists and a numbe...
The modern funeral industry faces many environmental risks and challenges, such as the use of sustai...
Globally, it is widely acknowledged that we need to find more sustainable ways of disposing the dead...
While societies are becoming increasingly aware of their environmental footprint in life, people rar...
In the late Nineteenth Century, doctors concerned with the unsanitary and crowded cemeteries of the ...
This article draws on data from a qualitative study of the destinations of ashes now being removed i...
Nearly 80 million baby boomers are approaching the end of their lives. Being more environmentally co...
Most conservation scientists and practitioners are unaware that their corpses can transform into pro...
Abstract Methods for preparing and burying the dead vary widely across time and cultures, but an end...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Mortality on January 2...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associate...
The subject of to-night's paper is perhaps a somewhat sad one, and appeals largely to the sentiment...
The argument of this thesis is that corpse disposal in England is a production process where value i...
The rise of natural burials has not been without controversy. Traditionalist funeralists and a numbe...
The modern funeral industry faces many environmental risks and challenges, such as the use of sustai...
Globally, it is widely acknowledged that we need to find more sustainable ways of disposing the dead...
While societies are becoming increasingly aware of their environmental footprint in life, people rar...
In the late Nineteenth Century, doctors concerned with the unsanitary and crowded cemeteries of the ...
This article draws on data from a qualitative study of the destinations of ashes now being removed i...
Nearly 80 million baby boomers are approaching the end of their lives. Being more environmentally co...
Most conservation scientists and practitioners are unaware that their corpses can transform into pro...