Skip to main content
Skip to main navigation menu
Skip to site footer
Open Menu
Current
Archives
About
About the Journal
The People Behind the Journal
Contact
Privacy Statement
Imprint
Search
Register
Login
Home
/
Archives
/
2022
2022
Published:
2023-03-08
Spring
In Praise of Weeds:
Sympoiesis
at St. James’s Piccadilly
Kate Rigby
PDF
A Blue-Green Oasis in the Heart of the Kazakh Steppe: The Korgalzhyn Nature Reserve
David Moon
PDF
Of Ghost Nets and the Haunting at Nissum Bredning
Sebastian Lundsteen
PDF
Good Foods and Bad Foods: The 1862 Measles Epidemic and Diet in Edo
James Morris
PDF
Cryptids and Disasters: Serpents and a Werewolf in the Western Indian Ocean Region
Jonathan R. Walz, Rory A. Walshe
PDF
Early Struggles to Maintain Captive Dolphins at the New York Public Aquarium
Samantha Muka
PDF
Multispecies Walden Woods: Reevaluating Thoreau’s Religion
Alda Balthrop-Lewis
PDF
Threats to the Hadzabe and Why We Should Care
Seth Jones
PDF
Summer
Making Rain under the Mallas
Iain Sinclair
PDF
Golden Grains: Environmental Implications of Mennonite Migration to Kansas in the Late Nineteenth Century
Katherine Hill
PDF
Hostage to Nuclear Power Plants: Weekly Funeral Procession Protest at the Wolsong Nuclear Power Plants, Gyeongju, South Korea
Minjung Noh, Shinyoung Kim
PDF
What Does It Mean to Study Environments in Ukraine Now?
Darya Tsymbalyuk
PDF
Autumn
Climate Change and Pastoral Nomads: Feedback Loops in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Munkhbileg Batmunkh
PDF
The Mighty Streams: Coping with Rivers in the Ancient World
Krešimir Vuković
PDF
From Wilderness to Breeding Farms: The Domestication of the Chinchilla lanigera
Ángela Vergara
PDF
Philippe-Sirice Bridel, the Natural Landscape, and the Swiss National Sentiment
Nicolas de Félice
PDF
Poles of Exploration and Exploitation: Olaudah Equiano in the Arctic
Henry Jacob
PDF
“his & nature’s expropriation”: Wetland Enclosure, Salvage Poetics, and Social Reproduction in Wendy Mulford’s East Anglia Sequence
Fred Carter
PDF
Information
For Authors
Hosted by
University Library LMU Munich