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Global Warming in Local Discourses: How Communities around the World Make Sense of Climate Change
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 137

Global Warming in Local Discourses: How Communities around the World Make Sense of Climate Change

Global news on anthropogenic climate change is shaped by international politics, scientific reports and voices from transnational protest movements. This timely volume asks how local communities engage with these transnational discourses. The chapters in this volume present a range of compelling case studies drawn from a broad cross-section of local communities around the world, reflecting diverse cultural and geographical contexts. From Greenland to northern Tanzania, it illuminates how different understandings evolve in diverse cultural and geographical contexts while also revealing some common patterns of how people make sense of climate change. Global Warming in Local Discourses constitu...

Andean Meltdown
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 210

Andean Meltdown

"Using case studies from four field sites in the Peruvian highlands where the author has conducted long-term fieldwork, Andean Meltdown offers an ethnographic account of how Andean people make sense of and adapt to climate change. Karsten Paerregaard investigates how climate change prompts them to not only reorganize their daily activities, adjust their ritual traditions, and reshuffle their worldview, but also take action to protect and gain control over their water resources, the environment, and ultimately their lives. Examining the multiple ways climate change intersects with environmental, social, and political change in Peru, Paerregaard also explores how the state and other external actors influence Andean people's climate experience and perception and how new practices and imaginations emerge from rapid environmental change. The book's claim is that climate change and its impact on Andean society must be investigated within the broader context of current social, political, and cultural change in Peru"--

Green Lands for White Men
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 330

Green Lands for White Men

How an audacious environmental engineering plan fanned white settlers’ visions for South Africa, stoked mistrust in scientific experts, and gave rise to the Apartheid state. In 1918, South Africa’s climate seemed to be drying up. White farmers claimed that rainfall was dwindling, while nineteenth-century missionaries and explorers had found riverbeds, seashells, and other evidence of a verdant past deep in the Kalahari Desert. Government experts insisted, however, that the rains weren’t disappearing; the land, long susceptible to periodic drought, had been further degraded by settler farmers’ agricultural practices—an explanation that white South Africans rejected. So when the geol...

Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 488

Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire

Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire provides the first wide-ranging environmental history of the heyday of European imperialism, from the late nineteenth century to the end of the colonial era. It focuses on the ecological dimensions of the explosive growth of tropical commodity production, global trade, and modern resource management strategies that still visibly shape our world today, and how they were related to broader social, cultural, and political developments in Europe's colonies. Covering the overseas empires of all the major European powers, Corey Ross argues that tropical environments were not merely a stage on which conquest and subjugation took place, but were an essential pa...

Building Trust, Situating Repair
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 125

Building Trust, Situating Repair

Nature conservation is often framed as an ecological problem in need of repair. With both material and discursive dimensions, repairing things involves repairing people's orientation to those things. As such, nature conservation can be understood as a negotiation between different orientations to ecological problems. This publication seeks to understand the negotiation through trust, the analysis of which situates repair in a particular setting. Empirically, the book is structured around an encounter that unfolded over the course of a single day between white commercial farmers and experts belonging to various government departments, universities and an NGO working in a South African nature ...

Gendering the Settler State
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 229

Gendering the Settler State

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2015-11-06
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  • Publisher: Routledge

White women cut an ambivalent figure in the transnational history of the British Empire. They tend to be remembered as malicious harridans personifying the worst excesses of colonialism, as vacuous fusspots, whose lives were punctuated by a series of frivolous pastimes, or as casualties of patriarchy, constrained by male actions and gendered ideologies. This book, which places itself amongst other "new imperial histories", argues that the reality of the situation, is of course, much more intricate and complex. Focusing on post-war colonial Rhodesia, Gendering the Settler State provides a fine-grained analysis of the role(s) of white women in the colonial enterprise, arguing that they held ambiguous and inconsistent views on a variety of issues including liberalism, gender, race and colonialism.

Ecological Interdependencies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 354

Ecological Interdependencies

This volume interrogates the environmental humanities through the lens of asymmetrical dependencies: it is interested in investigating the relationship between the environment and asymmetrical power dynamics, an approach that sheds light on how historical and contemporary inequalities have shaped and still shape our social, political and cultural realities as they intersect with their respective ecosystems. In an attempt to bridge disciplines, the volume synthesizes diverse perspectives from the humanities and social sciences – anthropology, art history, cultural studies, archaeology, religious studies, political science, and literary studies –, attending to the tangled and often thorny ...

Zambia Social Science Journal Vol. 3, No. 2
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 88

Zambia Social Science Journal Vol. 3, No. 2

This journal has been discontinued. Any issues are available to purchase separately.

Who's who in Central and East-Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1178

Who's who in Central and East-Europe

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1935
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Heine Family Heritage Book
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1150

The Heine Family Heritage Book

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1985
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Cord Heinrich Ludwig Heine (1807-1883) married Katherine Dorothea Margaretha Keil in 1833, and immigrated in 1857 from Germany to Rehburg, Texas. Descendants and relatives lived in Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Florida and elsewhere. Includes ancestors in Germany to about 1700.