Probing the past to better understand the present and prepare for an uncertain future. I think it’s fair to say that no field of history has grown more swiftly in quantity or sophistication in the 21st century than environmental history. The reason is, I suspect, self-evident: it’s in part a scholarly response to global warming, biodiversity loss, volatile and extreme weather events, and climate change–related diseases.
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I am a historian of social and ecological change in Latin American and the US West. I specialize in histories of conservation and animal history as well as pedagogy on the environment. My first book, Revolutionary Parks: Conservation, Social Justice, and Mexico’s National Parks, (University of Arizona Press, 2011) received awards from the Conference of Latin American History, the Forest History Society, and the Southeastern Council on Latin American Studies. With Michelle K. Berry, I published a Primer for Teaching Environmental History (Duke 2018) and co-edited and contributed to The Nature State: Rethinking the History of Conservation (Routledge 2017). My current research, tentatively titled “From Extinction to Biodiversity: How Conservation Translated Science in South America” is an exploration landscape change and nature protection over the twentieth century. Funded by a National Science Foundation Scholars Award and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, th