Environmental Sustainability and Technological Change: The Slurry-Tanks Conflict in Galician Agriculture (1999–2019)
This article investigates the problem of defining technological change based on environmental sustainability criteria in Galicia.
This article investigates the problem of defining technological change based on environmental sustainability criteria in Galicia.
This article discusses how local perspectives influence the recognition and control of a locust outbreak.
This article shows how rural collective action in tropical Australia transformed plantations into small farms in the late nineteenth century.
This article explores the impact of extensive pesticide use in Nicaragua after World War Two.
In the first half of the eighteenth century, the Portuguese Atlantic coast was affected by windblown sands moving from the ocean to inland areas.
Cobbled-together machines are turned loose on nature in a desperate bid to coax peanuts from the soils of Tanganyika Territory.
A reflection on the relevance of materialities in the history of the “Plastic Sea” of Almería.
With the foundation of the mission village Botshabelo, new plant and animal species settle in this region, whose landscape is heavily altered.
The history of the Danube regulation in the Austrian Machland during the nineteenth century shows the enormous efforts made to transform a dynamic river landscape into a navigable waterway and a stable floodplain that supports the various human demands.
The bat guano rush of 2007–2008 helped to initiate farmer experimentation with waste on northern Pemba Island.