Introduction
1.The Export of the American National Park Idea in an Age of
Empire: The Philippines, 1898 1940
Ian Tyrrell
2.Protecting Patagonia: Science, Conservation and the
Pre-History of the Nature State on a South American Frontier,
1903-1934
Emily Wakild
3.Another way to preserve: hunting bans, biosecurity, and the
brown bear in Italy, 1930-1960
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg
4. Conservation Politics in the Madras Presidency: Maintaining
the Lord Wenlock Downs of the Nilgiris Grasslands, South India, as
a National Park,1930-1950
Siddhartha Krishnan
5.Negotiating the Nature State Beyond the Parks: Conservation in
20th Century North-Central Namibia
Emmanuel Kreike
6. Conventional thinking and the fragile birth of the Nature
State in post-war Britain.
Matthew Kelly
7. Behind the Scenes and Out in the Open: Making Colombian
National Parks in the 1960s and 70s
Claudia Leal
8. Ordering the Borderland:Settlement and Removal in the Iguaçu
National Park, Brazil, 1940s-1970s
Frederico Freitas
9. Discovering China’s Tropical Rainforests: Shifting Approaches
to People and Nature in the late Twentieth Century
Michael Hathaway
10. Nature, State, and Conservation in the Danube Delta: Turning
Fishermen into Outlaws
Stefan Dorondel and Veronica Mitroi
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg is a Senior Research Scholar at the Max
Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin, Germany,
where he coordinates the working group ‘Art of Judgement’. He holds
a PhD in geography from the University of Cambridge, UK, and has
worked at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, the Rachel
Carson Center, Munich, Germany, and the University of Trento,
Italy.
Matthew Kelly teaches history at Northumbria University,
UK, where he is helping to establish the environmental
humanities as a broad area of research and teaching within the
university. He was an Associate Professor at the University of
Southampton, UK, and a Fellow of the Rachel Carson Center,
Munich, Germany.
Claudia Leal holds a PhD in geography from the University of
California at Berkeley, USA, and is Associate
Professor in the Department of History at Universidad de los
Andes in Bogotá, Colombia. She was a Fellow of the Rachel
Carson Center, Munich, Germany, and Co-president of the Latin
American and Caribbean Society for Environmental History.
Emily Wakild teaches Latin American and Environmental History at
Boise State University in Idaho, USA. Her current projects include
a primer on teaching environmental history and a monograph on the
social and ecological regions of Amazonia and Patagonia.
"This book offers a bold new concept, the "nature state," intended
to take its place beside useful terms such as the welfare state or
patrimonial state. Building on fresh case studies from every
inhabited continent, the volume explores the tangled links between
states and the natural world in illuminating ways."
J.R. McNeill, Georgetown University "Environmental history takes an
important and imaginative stride forward with the concept of a
‘’nature state’’ introduced here through a rich collection of
unusual and varied examples. This innovative approach to theorizing
state control over the natural environment in the 20thcentury will
serve as a productive model for future scholarship on this exciting
theme."
Jane Carruthers, University of South Africa"[T]he contents of The
Nature State are wide-ranging in topic and diverse in space. A
quick list will illustrate the case studies from every inhabited
continent: national parks in the Philippines, Namibia, southern
India, Colombia and Brazil, science and conservation in Patagonia,
China’s tropical rainforests and in the Danube Delta. A rich haul
indeed, all well written, balanced and interesting...The book will
be useful as a teaching tool and, no doubt, the type of discussion
at the ESEH panel will be replicated in the classroom and beyond."
Jane Carruthers, International Consortium of Enviromental History
Organizations, July 2017
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