Politics, Science, and the Environment
This series addresses the increasingly complex questions of how societies come to understand, confront, and cope with both the sources and the manifestations of present and potential environmental threats. Works in the series may focus on matters political, scientific, technical, social, or economic. What they share is attention to the intertwined roles of politics, science, and technology in the recognition, framing, analysis, and management of environmentally related contemporary issues, and a manifest relevance to the increasingly difficult problems of identifying and forging environmentally sound public policy. As our understanding of environmental threats deepens and broadens, it is increasingly clear that many environmental issues cannot be simply understood, analyzed, or acted upon. The multifaceted relationships between human beings, social and political institutions, and the physical environment in which they are situated extend across disciplinary as well as geopolitical confines, and cannot be analyzed or resolved in isolation.
Series editor: Peter Haas and Sheila Jasanoff
Search Results
Seed Activism
Pub Date: Oct 04, 2022
Acquired Tastes
Pub Date: Aug 17, 2021
The Immigrant-Food Nexus
Pub Date: Mar 24, 2020
The New American Farmer
Pub Date: Nov 12, 2019
Global Meat
Pub Date: Oct 29, 2019
Feeding the Other
Pub Date: Apr 09, 2019
GMOs Decoded
Pub Date: Mar 12, 2019
Big Hunger
Pub Date: Apr 13, 2018
Beyond the Tragedy in Global Fisheries
Pub Date: Sep 08, 2017
Food Trucks, Cultural Identity, and Social Justice
Pub Date: Sep 08, 2017
Organic Struggle
Pub Date: Feb 24, 2017
Between Preservation and Exploitation
Pub Date: Mar 25, 2016
A Fragmented Continent
Pub Date: Nov 13, 2015
Food Justice
Pub Date: Jan 25, 2013
California Cuisine and Just Food
Pub Date: Sep 28, 2012