
New Podcast with Alumna Anna Haebich
RCC Alumni Anna Haebich talks to Phillip Adams about botanist Johann August Ludwig Preiss, who roamed Western Australia from 1838-1842.
RCC Alumni Anna Haebich talks to Phillip Adams about botanist Johann August Ludwig Preiss, who roamed Western Australia from 1838-1842.
In her new book Hope Matters, Elin Kelsey argues doom and gloom won’t help us solve the climate crisis.
A new book titled, “People of the River: Lost Worlds of Early Australia” has been published by Alumna Grace Karskens
A new book titled, ‘Right to Nature: Social Movements, Environmental Justice and Neoliberal Natures’ has been published by Alumna Elia Apostolopoulou
Two volumes by Alumnus Sigurd Bergmann titled Eschatology as Imagining End (Routledge) and Arts, Religion, and the Environment (Brill), coedited with Forrest J. Clingerman have been published.
Alumni fellow Teresa Sabol Spezio has recently published an in-depth history of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill. This event was a transformative moment in pollution control and for the nascent environmental activist movement.
Shane McCorristine’s The Spectral Arctic (University College London Press), looks at the importance of dreams and ghosts in narratives of John Franklin’s attempt to navigate the Northwest Passage.
A new book has been launched by Alumni Anitra Nelson titled, “Small Is Necessary” (Pluto Press)
Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society
LMU Munich
Leopoldstr. 11a
D-80802 Munich
Phone: +49 (0) 89/ 2180- 72352
Fax: +49 (0) 89/ 2180- 72353