Skip to content

Environmental History Now.

A Platform on Representation, Engagement, and Community
  • About
    • The Team
    • Contributors
    • Series
  • News
  • Series
  • Podcast
  • Submit
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Mastodon
  • LinkedIn
  • Search
EHN Blog by Jessica JohnstonApr 18, 20237:00 amApril 18, 2023
Read More

We Are All Seeds: Heirloom Seed Saving, Multispecies Justice, and Resisting Colonial Erasures in the Occupied Palestinian Territories

Scholars of multispecies justice are increasingly turning toward plants, animals, fungi and complex other-than-human organisms as subjects of justice in our shared worlds.

Field Notes by Morgan P. VickersApr 12, 20237:00 amMarch 30, 2023
Read More
The author's vantage point on a small wooden boat which they rowed through the privately-maintained swamps of Cypress Gardens. The water is dark, nearly black, and is speckled with patches of green algae and plants. Cypress trees lie ahead, thinned out from past timbering. Though the path is a little unclear, there is only one direction visitors are allowed to follow.

The Containable Quagmire? Colonial Environmental Legacies and Continued Attempts to Control Swamps

In August 1938, nearly 12,000 majority-white New Deal laborers employed by the federal government began clearing land, relocating communities, and erecting a forty-two-mile system of dams and dikes under the direction of the South Carolina Public Service Authority.

EHN Blog by Kera LovellApr 4, 20237:00 amApril 4, 2023
Read More

Green Space Versus the Police State: The Future of Weelaunee People’s Park

Atlanta—a twentieth-century hub for the Black middle class, a battleground over segregation, and now … the destination for brunch?

News by EHN TeamMar 31, 20235:00 pmJune 1, 2023

EHN March Community Letter

News by EHN TeamMar 31, 20237:00 amMarch 31, 2023

Celebrating Our Contributors #3

News by EHN TeamMar 20, 20234:30 pmAugust 7, 2023

EHN at ASEH 2023

News by EHN TeamMar 16, 20237:00 amMarch 29, 2023

Celebrating Our Contributors #2

Field Notes by Laura TackMar 14, 20237:00 amMarch 14, 2023
Black and white illustration of a partially destroyed barn and seawater flooding the area around the barn. Four or more people are barely visible, clinging on to debris or landforms. Waves crash around fence posts, with a stormy gray sky and a few seagulls overhead.

Environmental History and Coastal Protection: A Memorial Excursion and Conference

EHN Blog by Bava DharaniMar 10, 20237:00 amMarch 10, 2023
Read More

Building on Sand: The Forgotten Roots of Singaporean Land Reclamation from Colony to Postcolony

“What kind of world can be built from sterile and lifeless sand and land that has no roots, no history, and no memory, except for the violent extraction from its homeland?”

News by EHN TeamMar 2, 20237:00 amMarch 29, 2023

Celebrating Our Contributors #1

Posts navigation

Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 … 28 Next
© 2023 Environmental History Now..

Begin typing your search above and press return to search. Press Esc to cancel.