NOMIS Foundation, Yale University’s Program in Agrarian Studies, Environmental Humanities Program, Department of Anthropology, and Kathleen Keenan in History of Science and Medicine; the University of Cambridge Department of History and Philosophy of Science; the Warburg Institute; and the Consortium for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine
The editors of History of Anthropology Review are pleased to share details of our first in-person conference: “Environmental Anthropologies: Pasts, Presents, Futures,” which will take place on March 31 and April 1 at Yale University, in collaboration with Yale's History of Science and Medicine Program.
This conference revisits the past 150+ years of anthropological and ethnographic research on relationships among human lifeways, cultures, and environments. How can the errors and insights of earlier paradigms help us grapple with shifting, unpredictable ecologies today? Experts from Anthropology, History, Science Studies, Indigenous Studies, and Environmental Science will reflect on earlier encounters, and on ways for these fields to talk, think, and work together now.
A full schedule and information on registration can be found at:
https://histanthro.org/news/announcements/conference-enviro-anthro-har-yale/
This event is made possible by the support of the NOMIS Foundation. Further generous support is provided by Yale University’s Program in Agrarian Studies, Environmental Humanities Program, Department of Anthropology, and Kathleen Keenan in History of Science and Medicine; the University of Cambridge Department of History and Philosophy of Science; the Warburg Institute; and the Consortium for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine.
For more information on how to attend and to register interest, please email enviro.anthro.hist.yale.2025@gmail.com.