First published online: 04 December 2020Through considering a "Geo Archive" as a tool of history, this paper explores several conundrums concerning environmental migration in social sciences. It demonstrates how historical perspectives can problematize and unsettle various automatisms that are widely present in journalistic, public, and policy discourses. Through examples from the Geo Archive, the article illustrates how unavoidable historical dimensions can enrich our understandings on the interaction between environmental issues and migration flows. This paper engages with an open access "archive in-the-making". This Geo Archive includes case studies of migration flows and puts those flows in conversation with environmental transformation...
With the efflorescence of palaeoscientific approaches to the past, historians have been confronted w...
How shall we judge the element of practicality or urgency for scholars working in the era of the 203...
This is an open access book. Histories we tell never emerge in a vacuum, and history as an academic ...
Through considering a "Geo Archive" as a tool of history, this paper explores several conundrums con...
Scholars using quantitative and spatial methods have revisited some of the foundational texts in env...
This article explores the current state of the field of environmental history in Britain, ...
With the efflorescence of palaeoscientific approaches to the past, historians have been confronted w...
History as a subject for higher education (and beyond) has often been criticized for failing to be r...
Societal debates about climate change have rekindled interest in environmental history approaches. T...
COVID-19 gives a fresh urgency to researchtrajectories around climate and environment in historicalr...
This article explores the current state of the field of environmental history in Britain, focusing o...
The author discusses some of the challenges of developing the environmental history of the nonhuman,...
Environmental history and the history of the earth and environmental sciences are now converging in ...
Over the past two decades, the growing availability of palaeo-climatic data has opened up new opport...
The emergence of the environmental humanities presents a unique opportunity for scholarship to tackl...
With the efflorescence of palaeoscientific approaches to the past, historians have been confronted w...
How shall we judge the element of practicality or urgency for scholars working in the era of the 203...
This is an open access book. Histories we tell never emerge in a vacuum, and history as an academic ...
Through considering a "Geo Archive" as a tool of history, this paper explores several conundrums con...
Scholars using quantitative and spatial methods have revisited some of the foundational texts in env...
This article explores the current state of the field of environmental history in Britain, ...
With the efflorescence of palaeoscientific approaches to the past, historians have been confronted w...
History as a subject for higher education (and beyond) has often been criticized for failing to be r...
Societal debates about climate change have rekindled interest in environmental history approaches. T...
COVID-19 gives a fresh urgency to researchtrajectories around climate and environment in historicalr...
This article explores the current state of the field of environmental history in Britain, focusing o...
The author discusses some of the challenges of developing the environmental history of the nonhuman,...
Environmental history and the history of the earth and environmental sciences are now converging in ...
Over the past two decades, the growing availability of palaeo-climatic data has opened up new opport...
The emergence of the environmental humanities presents a unique opportunity for scholarship to tackl...
With the efflorescence of palaeoscientific approaches to the past, historians have been confronted w...
How shall we judge the element of practicality or urgency for scholars working in the era of the 203...
This is an open access book. Histories we tell never emerge in a vacuum, and history as an academic ...