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| biblioscope: An Archival Guide & Bibliography | Environmental History, 10.4 | The History Cooperative
10.4  
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October, 2005
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biblioscope

AN ARCHIVAL GUIDE & BIBLIOGRAPHY

ARTICLES


Agrawal, Arun. "Environmentality: Community, Intimate Government, and the Making of Environmental Subjects in Kumaon, India." Current Anthropology 46 (April 2005): 161–190. Focusing on Kumaon, northern India, examines how and why rural residents come to care about the environment. Explores the relationship between government and subjects in the twentieth century, primarily 1980s–1990s, analyzing how involvement in environmental regulation facilitate new ways of understanding the environment.

Akerman, James R., and Daniel Block. "The Shifting Agendas of Midwestern Official State Highway Maps." Michigan Historical Review 31 (Spring 2005): 123–165. Examines the evolution of official state highway maps, published and distributed by state highway departments until the 1970s, in the Midwestern United States. Explores how tourism promotion competed with other agendas and practices in the creation of these maps.

Alban, Nicolas, and Caroline Berwick. "Forêt et Religion au Japon: D'Une Vision Singulière de L'Arbre à une Gestion Particulière de la Forêt." Revue foresticre française 6 (2004): 563–572. "Forests and Religion in Japan: From a Distinctive Vision of Trees to a Particular Type of Forest Management."

Examines how the view of trees from perspectives of Shintoism and Buddhism, Japan's two main religions, is emblematic of a distinctive vision of nature. Examines how the management of gardens and parks related to religious temples has changed in response to the country's economic development.

Alcantara, Christopher. "The Harmonization Accord: Stakeholder Influence on the Canada-Wide Standards for Dioxins and Furans." Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d'études canadiennes 39 (Spring 2005): 156–178. Explores the effects of the 1998 Canada-Wide Accord on Environmental Harmonization on stakeholder participation in the creation of environmental standards, specifically whether there was significant public access to the process of creating the Canada-Wide Standard for Dioxins and Furans for waste incinerators.

Allemeyer, Marie Luisa. "Environment, Mentalities and Social Structures: The Northfrisian Coast in the Early Modern Era." In History and Sustainability: Third International Conference of the European Society for Environmental History Proceedings, Florence, Italy, February 16–19, 2005, ed. Mauro Agnoletti, et al. Florence: Istituto di Studi sulle Societa del Mediterraneo—CNR; Universita de Firenze, Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Ambientali e Forestali; European Society for Environmental History, 2005. 141–143 pp. Examines the relationship between people and nature as demonstrated by the example of dike construction in the coastal community in Schleswig-Holstien, Germany, during the early modern period. Paper presented at February 2005 Third International Conference of the European Society for Environmental History.

Andersen, Phyllis. "'If Washington Were Here Himself, He Would Be on My Side': Charles Sprague Sargent and the Preservation of the Mount Vernon Landscape." In Design With Culture: Claiming America's Landscape Heritage, ed. Charles A. Birnbaum and Mary V. Hughes. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2005. 39–56 pp. Examines the role of Charles Sprague Sargent, then director of Harvard University's Arnold Arboretum, in historic preservation efforts at Mount Vernon in Virginia from 1911 until his death in 1927.

Antinori, Camille. "Vertical Integration in the Community Forestry Enterprises of Oaxaca." In The Community Forests of Mexico: Managing for Sustainable Landscapes, ed. David Barton Bray, Leticia Merino-Pérez, and Deborah Barry. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005. 241–272 pp. Discusses the twentieth century history and political organization of community forestry enterprises in Oaxaca, Mexico. Examines the results of a 1997–1998 survey analyzing how communities with common property forests approach market opportunities.

Aoki, Keith. "Malthus, Mendel, and Monsanto: Intellectual Property and the Law and Politics of Global Food Supply: An Introduction." Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation 19 (2 2004): 397–453. Introduction to papers presented at an April 2004 symposium on the topic, which arose from the present-day intersection of trends represented by the three Ms in the title: Thomas Malthus, a late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century economist who foresaw population outstripping food supply; Gregor Mendel, a nineteenth-century abbot whose early work in plant heredity laid the groundwork for hybrid crop development; and Monsanto, a St. Louis-based chemical company that became a dominant supplier of the so-called "Green Revolution" in the 1970s. Lays out the emerging global backdrop of treatment of Plant Genetic Resources (PGR).. . .

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