The Environmental Humanities is a new interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary field of research addressed to the cultural dimensions of today's pressing socio-environmental problems, such as resource depletion, environmental injustice, oceanic pollution and acidification, anthropogenic climate change, and escalating extinctions.
The Centre for Environmental Humanities is a group of scholars at the University of Bristol working on environmental issues from humanities perspectives. We recognise that entangled in the environmental issues that face our global community are matters of human behaviour, beliefs, values, and.Environmental Humanities is a two-year degree training the next generation of environmental leaders and thinkers. This fully-funded master’s program positions students to study climate change, resilience, advocacy and other interests in preparation for changing the world. We encourage creative and scholarly exchanges toward new forms of.Humanities Research Programmes present a range of research opportunities, shaped by a university’s particular expertise, facilities and resources. You will usually identify a suitable topic for your PhD and propose your own project. Additional training and development opportunities may also be offered as part of your programme.
Gitte Westergaard is a PhD candidate in Environmental Humanities at the University of Stavanger, Norway. Her research interests comprise questions related to museum practices and heritage management more broadly, shaping human understanding and relation to nature.
The Ghent University is delighted to announce fully funded PhD Scholarship in Environmental Humanities in the Department of Literary Studies at Ghent University, Belgium, tenable for a period of up to four years. Ghent University is a top 100 university and one of the major universities in Belgium. Our 11 faculties offer.
Professor on the Environmental Humanities, Bath Spa University Owain Jones gained a PhD in Cultural Geography at the University of Bristol in 1997 and since then has researched and written about many aspects of nature-society relations, landscape, place, memory and the environmental crisis.
Through Yale’s many center, programs, and departments, Yale faculty and students pursue innovative environmental projects across the humanities. Yale hosts regular colloquia, lectures, and conferences in environmental history, literature and the environment, religion and ecology, environmental anthropology, and other topics.
The Environmental Humanities is a new, emerging area of interdisciplinary studies of the environmental and climate crisis. It is designed to both critically inspect the current planetary predicament as the crisis of environmental imagination which demands a pivotal paradigm shift in our values.
The Centre for Environmental Arts and Humanities brings together colleagues from across disciplines who are united by a common concern and challenge: the work of the arts and humanities in current debates around environment and sustainability, cultures and communities, narrative and representation.
Environmental Humanities for a Concerned Europe (ENHANCE) is a Marie Curie European Innovative Training Network (ITN) providing multidisciplinary doctoral training in Environmental Humanities. The four main partners are the University of Leeds (UK), the Environmental Humanities Lab at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society.
Living with Environmental Change. Living With Environmental Change (LWEC) is a ten year research programme with over 20 different funding partners. LWEC aims to meet the needs identified by the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change, the United Nations’ Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and the reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on.
The Edinburgh Environmental Humanities Network is an exciting new initiative in the study of environmental issues. The network presents researchers within the humanities with a forum in which to engage with each other’s work, to share insights, and develop collaborative partnerships.
Why study Environmental Humanities in Vermont? With rich cultural traditions, diverse settled and wild landscapes, and a disproportionate number of artists and craftspeople, Vermont is an ideal place to study the interrelationships between culture and ecology, as well as to practice your own craft.
The Environmental Humanities Research Group investigates the relationships between human creativity, social life and the nonhuman world. Based in Leeds’s School of English, but working across disciplines, we collaborate with academic and non-academic partners to conduct cutting-edge scholarship on literature and culture in the context of the global environmental crisis.
Marine Transgressions was a two-day Environmental Humanities conference that took place on the 7 and 8 June 2018, at the Create Centre, Bristol. It was a collaboration between the Research Centre for Environmental Humanities of the University of Bristol and Bath Spa University.
Environmental Humanities This interdisciplinary group focuses on exploring the complex inter-relationship between societies and the environment, in the past and present. Addressing questions about climate change, environment and health, human-animal relations, among others, research in this theme draws together theory and methods from the humanities, social and natural sciences.
The Environmental Humanities Initiative engages a wide range of related fields, including indigenous studies, political ecology, food studies, cultural geography, animal studies, and cultural anthropology, and investigates such keywords as sustainability, the Anthropocene, and the posthuman.