Academic literature on the topic 'Historical Political Ecology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Historical Political Ecology"

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McCarthy, James. "First World Political Ecology: Lessons from the Wise Use Movement." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 34, no. 7 (2002): 1281–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a3526.

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The author demonstrates, through a case study of the Wise Use movement, that the insights and tools of political ecology have much to offer in the study of First World resource conflicts. He uses theories and methods drawn from the literature concerning political ecology and moral economies to argue that many assumptions regarding state capacity, individual and collective identities and motivations, and economic and historical relations in advanced capitalist countries are mistaken or incomplete in ways that have led to important dimensions of environmental conflicts in such locales being over
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Mann, Geoff. "Should political ecology be Marxist? A case for Gramsci’s historical materialism." Geoforum 40, no. 3 (2009): 335–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2008.12.004.

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York, Richard, and Philip Mancus. "Critical Human Ecology: Historical Materialism and Natural Laws." Sociological Theory 27, no. 2 (2009): 122–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9558.2009.01340.x.

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Rahimzadeh, Aghaghia. "Political ecology of land reforms in Kinnaur: Implications and a historical overview." Land Use Policy 70 (January 2018): 570–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.10.025.

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Simon, Gregory L., and Cody Peterson. "Disingenuous forests: A historical political ecology of fuelwood collection in South India." Journal of Historical Geography 63 (January 2019): 34–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2018.09.003.

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Davis, Diana K. "Historical political ecology: On the importance of looking back to move forward." Geoforum 40, no. 3 (2009): 285–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2009.01.001.

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Shutzer, Matthew. "Subterranean Properties: India's Political Ecology of Coal, 1870–1975." Comparative Studies in Society and History 63, no. 2 (2021): 400–432. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417521000098.

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AbstractScholars have long been attentive to the relationship between legal regimes and agrarian dispossession in the resource frontiers of the postcolonial world. The analytical problem of identifying how private firms use legal regimes to take control of land—whether for mining, plantations, or Special Economic Zones—now animates a new body of research seeking the historical antecedents for contemporary land grabs. In the case of colonial South Asia, existing scholarship has often tended to suggest that the law precedes processes of capital accumulation, and that colonial capital operated wi
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Sheridan, Thomas E. "Arizona: The Political Ecology of a Desert State." Journal of Political Ecology 2, no. 1 (1995): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v2i1.20130.

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In this paper, I argue that the emerging research strategy of political ecology needs to incorporate an active nature into its analysis of the commodification of natural resources and the politics of resource control. I make reference to earlier work among small rancher-farmers in Cucurpe, Sonora, where the nature of the crucial resources themselves--arable land, grazing land, and irrigation water--determined local agrarian politics as much or more as transnational market demand and Mexican federal agrarian policies. Then I examine water control in Arizona during the past century. I contend th
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De Vries, Daniel H., and James C. Fraser. "Historical waterscape trajectories that need care: the unwanted refurbished flood homes of Kinston's devolved disaster mitigation program." Journal of Political Ecology 24, no. 1 (2017): 931. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v24i1.20976.

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Abstract In 1999 Hurricane Floyd pummeled the eastern portion of North Carolina (NC, U.S.A.), and in its wake many localities participated in federal home acquisition-relocation programs in flood-prone areas, with shared and devolved governance. This article reports on one such program that was conducted in the City of Kinston, where a historical African-American neighborhood called Lincoln City was badly flooded by water containing raw sewage from a compromised wastewater treatment plant upstream. Afterwards, some of the acquired homes were relocated to an adjacent area populated by middle-cl
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Khan, Mohammad Tanzimuddin. "Theoretical frameworks in political ecology and participatory nature/forest conservation: the necessity for a heterodox approach and the critical moment." Journal of Political Ecology 20, no. 1 (2013): 460. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v20i1.21757.

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In this paper I review the major theoretical approaches to political ecology, and then introduce a research tool. The critical moment is a noticeable historical instance or interaction. Given the fluidity in the theoretical frameworks of political ecology and the growing dominance of participatory discourse, exploring critical moments provides a foundation for a heterodox approach to explaining human/society/nature relations. It is a way to uncover the multidimensional interpretation of power involving environmental actors, struggles, and key events. One of the key research areas for political
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Historical Political Ecology"

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Romero, Hugo. "Environmental conflicts and historical political ecology : a genealogy of the construction of dams in Chilean Patagonia." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2014. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/environmental-conflicts-and-historical-political-ecologya-genealogy-of-the-construction-of-dams-in-chilean-patagonia(41a79aa7-d426-47cc-bf00-adb38bb4bfbe).html.

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This research aims to understand environmental conflicts generated by large investment projects. Theoretically, this research locates itself within the historical political ecology perspective. It seeks to understand environmental conflicts as a clash of historical representations over the environment that can be traced from the process of dispossession by colonialism and the consolidation of the national state. It is argued that certain places have been constructed as specific socio-natural entities for the reproduction of power relations over nature and people through environmental transform
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Conant, Abram. "Capital's Chinese Pigpen: Political Ecologies of Pig Production in the People's Republic of China." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19695.

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This thesis analyzes contemporary political ecologies of pig farming in the People's Republic of China, as well as emergent discourses of “meatification” and the industrialization of Chinese agriculture more broadly. Situated within these extensive, heterogenous, and dynamic assemblages, which I contextualize in historical-geographical terms throughout Chapter I, I narrow my argument to three relatively neglected problematics that occupy subsequent chapters: the role of pigs in the affective construction of modernity, the microbiological zones of insecurity intertwined with industrial pig prod
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Plascak, Jesse John. "Disparities of Invasive Cervical Cancer Incidence and Related Factors in Ohio: An Integrated Approach." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1374147375.

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Siman, Kelly. "Social-Ecological Risk and Vulnerability to Erosion and Flooding Along the Ohio Lake Erie Shoreline." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1597092923090799.

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Nilsson, Maurice Seiji Tomioka. "Mobilidade Yanomami e interculturalidade: ecologia histórica, alteridade e resistência cultural." Universidade de São Paulo, 2018. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8161/tde-01102018-164453/.

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A mobilidade dos Yanomami tem papel decisivo na construção da paisagem amazônica ao produzir clareiras a serem regeneradas após cada mudança de residência. Esse processo não deve ser reduzido apenas ao seu aspecto de ecologia histórica, pois está intimamente ligado à organização social horizontalizada, orientada pelas alianças intercomunitárias. Nesse estudo é proposto um mapeamento das trajetórias de alguns grupos Yanomami, no Toototopi, Homoxi, Marauiá e os resistentes ao contato, Moxihatetemapë. Nos três primeiros, onde o posto de contato exerce uma atração pelo diferencial de potencialidad
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Ali, Ayesha. "Water Politics in a Water-Scarce Landscape : Examining the Groundwater Debate in California’s Central Valley." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-414194.

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The history of California is in many ways a story about water, and the outsized effect that droughts, floods, and seasonal precipitation rates have had on the political and economic development of the state over the past 170 years.  This thesis uses discourse analysis of historical and ongoing negotiations that have been presented in federal and state reports, narratives, case laws and legislation to explore how the discourse around water politics has been shaped in the state.  From this, an antiessentialist environmental history develops around the relationship between overdrafted groundwater
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Gabrielle, Huet Valentine. "Infrastructure Projects and Climate Change Adaption in the Era of Grassroots Movement Resurgence : Suggestions fro Transformational Actions." Thesis, KTH, Historiska studier av teknik, vetenskap och miljö, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-279994.

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In an ever-moving world, urban governance and infrastructure have to adapt to climate change. In the meantime, people's concerns and engagement towards urban projects which will affect their lives are growing. The climate change adaptation process is inevitable to implement, considering the multiplicity of climate change threats. Hawai'i is no exception, and it has to adapt its infrastructures to stronger and more frequent floods. This master's thesis highlights the case of the Ala Wai risk flood management plan in Hawai'i, the U.S., and the engagement of some Hawaiians in the Protect Our Ala
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Lasley, Carrie E. "Catastrophes and the Role of Social Networks in Recovery: A Case Study of St. Bernard Parish, LA, Residents After Hurricane Katrina." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2012. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1504.

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The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the experiences of St. Bernard Parish, La., residents as they coped with the impact of the catastrophe of Hurricane Katrina on August 29, 2005. An estimated 50,000 St. Bernard Parish residents relocated to a new home one year after Katina in 2006, and many of those residents moved again. This study examines the effects of the decisions of St. Bernard residents to relocate or to return on their social connections. The utility, adaptability and durability of social networks of these residents will be explored to enrich our knowledge about the social
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Books on the topic "Historical Political Ecology"

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An atlas of African affairs. Routledge, 1993.

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M, Denevan William, ed. Hispanic lands and peoples: Selected writings of James J. Parsons. Westview Press, 1989.

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Ken-ichi, Abe, Jong Wil de, and Lye Tuck-Po, eds. The political ecology of tropical forests in Southeast Asia: Historical perspectives. Kyoto University Press, 2003.

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Tuck-Po, Lye, Jong Wil de 1956-, and Abe Ken-ichi, eds. The political ecology of the tropical forests in Southeast Asia: Historical perspectives. Kyoto University Press, 2003.

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Climate Change Adaptation in Africa: An Historical Ecology. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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Oba, Gufu. Climate Change Adaptation in Africa: An Historical Ecology. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Campbell, Michael O'Neal. The Political Ecology of Soil Erosion in West Africa: An Historical and Contemporary Perspective. Nova Science Pub Inc, 2013.

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(Editor), Lye Tuck-Po, Wil De Jong (Editor), and Abe Ken-Ichi (Editor), eds. The Political Ecology of Tropical Forests in Southeast Asia: Historical Perspectives (Kyoto Area Studies on Asia, Vol 6). Trans Pacific Pr, 2003.

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Re-Thinking Freire: Globalization and the Environmental Crisis (Sociocultural, Political, and Historical Studies in Educatio). Lawrence Erlbaum, 2004.

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Steinmo, Sven. Historical Institutionalism and Experimental Methods. Edited by Orfeo Fioretos, Tulia G. Falleti, and Adam Sheingate. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199662814.013.6.

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Although a core insight of historical institutionalism (HI) is that history affects actors’ beliefs, values and preferences, it is difficult to test these propositions directly. This chapter argues that one way of testing HI theories is to integrate some of the methods and techniques of experimental social science. Using experimental methods, historical institutionalism can better explain how specific institutional structures, decision-making processes, and historical contexts frame individual choices and shape the broader ecology of political decisions. A combination of diverse research tradi
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Book chapters on the topic "Historical Political Ecology"

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Maselli, Daniel, and Inam-ur-Rahim. "Setting the Stage: Key Features of the Present-Day Central Asian Region: An Introduction to the Wider Historical, Social, Political, Economic, Cultural, and Ecologic Contexts of the Region in a Nutshell." In Rangeland Stewardship in Central Asia. Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5367-9_1.

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"Rappaport’s Rose: Structure, Agency, and Historical Contingency in Ecological Anthropology." In Reimagining Political Ecology. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822388142-013.

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"Healthcare in Uganda: Historical Perspective." In The Political Ecology of Malaria. transcript-Verlag, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839450536-040.

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"9. Political Economy and Pre-Columbian Landscape Transformations in Central Amazonia." In Time and Complexity in Historical Ecology. Columbia University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.7312/bale13562-012.

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Fairhead, James. "Archaeology and Environmental Anthropology: Collaborations in Historical and Political Ecology." In Humans and the Environment. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199590292.003.0027.

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This chapter examines the importance of integrating archaeological perspectives within contemporary environmental anthropology. It does this through exposing key questions raised by environmental anthropologists concerning West African relations with soil and forests that can only be addressed through collaboration with archaeological investigation (see also Balée, Chapter 3 this volume). Environmental anthropological research has been particularly important in revealing the ecological knowledge and environmental practices of land users and how these practices interplay with ecological and economic processes in the shaping of landscapes. This research has systematically undermined a paradigm of environmental reasoning that equates land use with the progressive degradation of otherwise ‘natural’, ‘equilibrial’, or ‘pristine’ environments (whether of soils, forests, or faunal assemblages). Whilst equilibrial ecology is apparently no longer upheld in ecological sciences either, in its shift to non-equilibrium ecology and recognition of path dependency, and whilst nature is no longer so easily configured simply as the absence of people, assumptions rooted in such simplistic ideas of nature still strongly inform and mislead the way West African environments are understood and problematized. Anthropologically derived critiques of the way landscapes are understood have been associated with a rereading of the history of those landscapes. Yet given how oral historical and anthropologically derived historical evidence can so easily be delegitimized and dismissed by apparently ‘harder’ sciences, environmental archaeology becomes a crucial player in these debates. In this brief chapter I shall focus on two key debates which can only be resolved (or reconceptualized) through environmental archaeology. The first of these concerns the degradation (or otherwise) of soils and vegetation linked to farming in West Africa’s Guinea savannah and forest-savannah transition zones. The second concerns the legacy of past land use on current ‘old growth’ forest in the Central and West African humid forest zones. These are not only interesting debates, but are at the heart of sustainable development policy deliberation in West Africa. The continued power of the paradigm in environmental reasoning that equates land use with the progressive degradation of otherwise ‘natural’ or ‘pristine’ environments is visible in the way that landscape features are often interpreted uncritically as ‘relicts’ of that nature.
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Bassett, Thomas J., and Karl S. Zimmerer. "Cultural Ecology." In Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198233923.003.0018.

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Cultural ecology in the 1990s was a highly productive and rapidly growing specialty group within geography. The group’s scholarship has contributed to a number of core themes and concepts in geography and in related fields within the social and biogeophysical sciences and humanities (Butzer 1989, 1990a; Porter 1991; B. L. Turner 1997a; Zimmerer 1996c). This review evaluates the central research contributions—findings, themes, concepts, methods—of North American geographical cultural ecology over this decade (1990–9). The evaluation is based on the clustering of the contributions of the 1990s into eight main areas: long-term cultural ecology; resource management; local knowledge; pastoralism; environmental politics; protected areas; gender ecology; and environmental discourses (Figs 8.1 and 8.2). Notable accomplishments and characteristic approaches are reviewed in each area. Emphasis is placed on the continued evolution of the common ground of cultural ecology and its most prominent offshoot, political ecology. A nature-culture or nature-society core is central to advances of the 1990s. This core is made up of interacting dialectical processes of culture-and-consciousness and domestic-and-political economy, on the one hand, and non-human nature, on the other hand (Zimmerer and Young 1998: 5). Increased awareness of this recursive interaction has led to a historical perspective that is common to much work in cultural and political ecology during the past decade (Figs 8.1 and 8.2). Culture and society in environmental interactions are considered with new importance granted to the multiple forms and contingencies of spatial scale, from the local to the global, as well as varied temporal frames. Culture and society are conceptualized in new ways while, at the same time, the biogeophysical environments themselves are thought of as increasingly complex and less spatially and temporally predictable than was previously presumed.
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Stahl, Peter W., Fernando J. Astudillo, Ross W. Jamieson, Diego Quiroga, and Florencio Delgado. "Humans Encounter Galápagos." In Historical Ecology and Archaeology in the Galápagos Islands. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813066271.003.0002.

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This chapter summarizes major events that occurred throughout an almost 500-year relationship between humans and Galápagos. Specific attention focuses on how the changing interests of humans in the islands contributed to ecosystemic landscape transformation up to the end of the Second World War. The chapter historically contextualizes the nature of the changes that transpired through direct human interaction with relatively recently encountered island ecosystems, and how this interconnected relationship shifted through time within the context of changing political and economic circumstances. It sequentially details alleged pre-Columbian visitation, early and later colonial human encounters, Republican-period colonization, and early twentieth century activities in the archipelago. The current human geography in Galápagos is briefly described, followed by a discussion of landscape transformation and invasive exotic organisms throughout the archipelago.
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Okorobia, Atei Mark, and Stephen Temegha Olali. "The Historical Trajectory of Crude Oil Exploration and Production in Nigeria, 1930–2015." In The Political Ecology of Oil and Gas Activities in the Nigerian Aquatic Ecosystem. Elsevier, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-809399-3.00002-1.

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Steinberg, Michael K., and Kent Mathewson. "Landscapes of Drugs and War : Intersections of Political Ecology and Global Conflict." In The Geography of War and Peace. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195162080.003.0018.

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The maxim of the moment and for the new millennium (at least for now) is that “after 9/11 the world changed.” Focused, amplified, and projected by the media, the September 2001 events have echoed with an apparent immensity and a rending of the global geopolitical fabric that merit comparison with Waterloo in June 1815 and Sarajevo in June 1914. In each case, an epoch is said to have ended, the first by conventional battle in concert with peace conventions that ended several decades of global conflict, the latter two with acts of terrorism that precipitated global wars of vastly differing intensities and probable durations. Each of these turning points in global history has, of course, its own character, dynamics, and contexts, which largely transcend the narrower episodes and scenes that constitute the intersections of drugs, war, and peace. Nevertheless, one of the persistent and little-noticed elements in the history and geography of warfare during the past half millennium has been the role played by psychoactive substances. With the exception of the Sino-British Opium Wars (1830s–1840s), drugs as aids or obstacles, let alone causal factors, of war have been largely overlooked. Yet even a cursory overview, as presented here, should establish the contours of a topic that merits in-depth attention. Here we have only the space to point to some key instances and promising case studies. Future researchers may find these useful points of departure. The three pivotal events noted earlier, plus October 1492 as the antecedent and fourth key moment, mark a fivefold periodization that provides a convenient way of framing the differing historical relations between drugs and warfare. Prior to Europe’s transatlantic expansion and the coeval eruption of capitalism across the globe, the varying articulations between drugs and war were largely local, individual, and particular. With the rise of long-distance trade networks structured by mercantile capitalism, prime commodities such as sugar and tropical spices launched European-based empires and provoked wars from the East Indies to the West Indies, as well as points north and south.
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Martin, Randall. "Gunpowder, Militarization, and Threshold Ecologies in Henry IV Part Two and Macbeth." In Shakespeare and Ecology. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199567027.003.0008.

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The disputed land-uses and cultivation practices represented in As You Like It responded to unprecedented changes in Elizabethan climate, population, and economic relations. Traditional modes of rural dwelling were no longer protected by virtue of their rural isolation or autonomy, but were becoming inescapably tied to national and global orders of competitive growth and resource exploitation. Perhaps the most disruptive of these modernizing turns was the development of gunpowder technologies and the armament industry. As in other western European countries, military culture became ubiquitous in England by the late sixteenth century as a result of innovations in gunpowder weapons and the formation of national armies. During the Middle Ages, low-tech weaponry and feudal mobilization had limited the social and environmental impacts of war. This situation began to change from the fifteenth century onwards with the development of far more deadly cannons, mines, and firearms. Influenced partly by the Erasmian ethics of his Humanist education (like Queen Elizabeth and King James in their attitudes to war), Shakespeare drew attention to gunpowder’s devastating effects on human and non-human animals and their environments in virtually all his history plays and several of his tragedies, even thoughmost of these references were anachronistic. By layering historical and contemporary viewpoints he registered changing material realities and cultural assumptions about the ecology of war: from self-regulating cycles of martial destruction and agrarian regeneration, to incremental technological mastery reliant on ever-increasing resource consumption. Traditional ideas about redeeming war through cultivation are captured by the Virgilian image of beating swords into ploughshares. It suggests that peacetime cultivation will heal wartime damage, and that periods of war and peace routinely alternate. The swordsinto-ploughshares trope also encodes temporal assumptions that the arc of catastrophe, in its political, ecological, and dramatic senses, is limited in scope and ultimately reversible. In this chapter I want to examine the emerging gunpowder regime putting pressure on this paradigm, and replacing it with modern structures of recoiling environmental risk and planetary push-back, represented in Henry IV Part Two and Macbeth respectively.
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Conference papers on the topic "Historical Political Ecology"

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Moravcova, Jana. "DEVELOPMENT OF LAND USE AND LAND TENURE IN RELATION TO THE HISTORICAL SOCIO-POLITICAL CHANGES IN THE CENTRAL EUROPE � CASE STUDY CZECH-AUSTRIAN BORDERS." In 14th SGEM GeoConference on ECOLOGY, ECONOMICS, EDUCATION AND LEGISLATION. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2014/b53/s21.015.

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