J. R. McNeill, Corinna R. Unger (eds.): Environmental Histories of the Cold War (2010)
Filed under book | Tags: · climate, cold war, ecology, environment, geopolitics, history, military, nuclear weapons, politics, war, war studies
“This book explores the links between the Cold War and the global environment, ranging from the environmental impacts of nuclear weapons to the political repercussions of environmentalism. Environmental change accelerated sharply during the Cold War years, and so did environmentalism as both a popular movement and a scientific preoccupation. Most Cold War history however entirely overlooks these developments, which were not only simultaneous but also linked together in ways both straightforward and surprising. The contributors to this book present these connected issues as a global phenomenon, with chapters concerning China, the USSR, Europe, North America, Oceania, and elsewhere. The role of experts as agents and advocates of using the environment as a weapon in the Cold War or, contrastingly, of preventing environmental damage resulting from Cold War politics is also given broad attention.”
Publisher Cambridge University Press, 2010
ISBN 0521762448, 9780521762441
362 pages
Reviews: Chaney (H-Net, 2011), Tucker (Michigan War Studies Review, 2012), Kinkela (Cold War History, 2013).
Conference report by Thomas Robertson (GFI Bulletin, 2007)
PDF (5 MB, updated on 2019-10-11)
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