This issue of RCC Perspectives uses mountains as a common denominator around which to discuss overarching challenges of environmental history: challenges relating not only to mountain landscapes, but also to broader questions of sources, methods, cross-cultural research, project scale, and audience. Each author discusses some of their most intriguing discoveries, resulting in a brief and diverse collection of environmental history snapshots. At the same time, authors reflect on the process of doing environmental history, relating specific setbacks and opportunities they have faced. The volume thus offers a sort of handbook of advice and encouragement to other scholars. Portraying both a demanding project and a trove of fascinating results, ...
In order to understand and moderate the effects of the accelerating rate of global environmental cha...
Over one hundred scholars assembled for the conference. Environmental history was broadly defined, f...
The Appalachian Mountains attracted an endless stream of visitors in the twentieth century, each bea...
Environmental history, the study of intersections between Nature and human nature, is one of the fas...
Through the pages of Environmental History Review, now Environmental History, an entire discipline h...
The chapters of this book covers the growing concern about mountain environments. It demonstrates th...
As a 'genre of history' in Australia environmental history is relatively new, emerging in the 1960s ...
Due to the localized nature of mountains, their great diversity, and the fact that their specificity...
This is the first volume of a brand new journal in the field of environmental history. Despite the h...
Through considering a "Geo Archive" as a tool of history, this paper explores several conundrums con...
Abstract: Mountains between nature, history and social systems. This text analyses the proposals of ...
In this experimental volume, researchers from Germany and Italy draw on autobiographical reflection ...
As environmental history matures as a discipline,it is crucial for environmental historians to take ...
The emergence of the environmental humanities presents a unique opportunity for scholarship to tackl...
This chapter will inventory the reasons why mountains are important to humankind, before reviewing h...
In order to understand and moderate the effects of the accelerating rate of global environmental cha...
Over one hundred scholars assembled for the conference. Environmental history was broadly defined, f...
The Appalachian Mountains attracted an endless stream of visitors in the twentieth century, each bea...
Environmental history, the study of intersections between Nature and human nature, is one of the fas...
Through the pages of Environmental History Review, now Environmental History, an entire discipline h...
The chapters of this book covers the growing concern about mountain environments. It demonstrates th...
As a 'genre of history' in Australia environmental history is relatively new, emerging in the 1960s ...
Due to the localized nature of mountains, their great diversity, and the fact that their specificity...
This is the first volume of a brand new journal in the field of environmental history. Despite the h...
Through considering a "Geo Archive" as a tool of history, this paper explores several conundrums con...
Abstract: Mountains between nature, history and social systems. This text analyses the proposals of ...
In this experimental volume, researchers from Germany and Italy draw on autobiographical reflection ...
As environmental history matures as a discipline,it is crucial for environmental historians to take ...
The emergence of the environmental humanities presents a unique opportunity for scholarship to tackl...
This chapter will inventory the reasons why mountains are important to humankind, before reviewing h...
In order to understand and moderate the effects of the accelerating rate of global environmental cha...
Over one hundred scholars assembled for the conference. Environmental history was broadly defined, f...
The Appalachian Mountains attracted an endless stream of visitors in the twentieth century, each bea...