To Preserve Nature and Protect Whiteness: Environmentalism after the Civil War In July 2015, The New York Times ran an op-ed that focused on a well-known problem: our national parks and the environmental movement that spawned them are overwhelmingly white. Minorities comprised 22 percent of ...
In 1908 President Theodore Roosevelt demonstrated tremendous foresight by organizing a conference of...
The U.S. National Park System contains places of world-renowned beauty and tremendous historical sig...
This forum argues that environmental historians ought to pay more attention to animal extinction—the...
Domestic visitation demographics dub America’s national parks as homogenously white. This paper arg...
The recent antiracist movement in the United States and beyond inspired the Sierra Club, one of the ...
Whereas most histories of national parks and indigenous peoples have largely focused on dispossessio...
A connection to nature is essential to our overall health and well-being, and the persistent inequal...
Why were people of color largely absent in the participation of environmental organizations until th...
"Against Extinction tells the history of wildlife conservation from its roots in the 19th century, t...
This thesis examines how Early American environmental groups— Romantic Transcendentalists, Preservat...
This paper seeks to frame an understanding of the legal protections for American wilderness as a res...
Americans’ perceptions of nature determine in what ways they physically interact with their environm...
The article looks at a specific case of racial oppression manifesting itself within development prog...
The topic of the paper is wilderness and the idea of wilderness. The introduction presents an outlin...
This paper examines the ways in which the conservation movement was a response to racial and gender ...
In 1908 President Theodore Roosevelt demonstrated tremendous foresight by organizing a conference of...
The U.S. National Park System contains places of world-renowned beauty and tremendous historical sig...
This forum argues that environmental historians ought to pay more attention to animal extinction—the...
Domestic visitation demographics dub America’s national parks as homogenously white. This paper arg...
The recent antiracist movement in the United States and beyond inspired the Sierra Club, one of the ...
Whereas most histories of national parks and indigenous peoples have largely focused on dispossessio...
A connection to nature is essential to our overall health and well-being, and the persistent inequal...
Why were people of color largely absent in the participation of environmental organizations until th...
"Against Extinction tells the history of wildlife conservation from its roots in the 19th century, t...
This thesis examines how Early American environmental groups— Romantic Transcendentalists, Preservat...
This paper seeks to frame an understanding of the legal protections for American wilderness as a res...
Americans’ perceptions of nature determine in what ways they physically interact with their environm...
The article looks at a specific case of racial oppression manifesting itself within development prog...
The topic of the paper is wilderness and the idea of wilderness. The introduction presents an outlin...
This paper examines the ways in which the conservation movement was a response to racial and gender ...
In 1908 President Theodore Roosevelt demonstrated tremendous foresight by organizing a conference of...
The U.S. National Park System contains places of world-renowned beauty and tremendous historical sig...
This forum argues that environmental historians ought to pay more attention to animal extinction—the...