The ASEH 2008 program is now available at: http://www.aseh.net/conferences/current-conference/conference-program
The Envirotech meeting will be held at lunch time on Thursday, 12:00 – 1:30.
The ASEH 2008 program is now available at: http://www.aseh.net/conferences/current-conference/conference-program
The Envirotech meeting will be held at lunch time on Thursday, 12:00 – 1:30.
As you may have noticed, the Envirotech Newsletter does now have a new format: from now on, all news items will be posted on the web page as they are submitted to the new newsletter editor at news@envirotechhistory.org. We will send out newsletters like this email twice a year to summarize all news posts.
If you visit the web page at http://www.envirotechhistory.org/ you will find many new improvements, such as the possibility to post comments and start discussions of news items, options to post your own news items, RSS feeds of new posts, a calendar of upcoming events, as well as a brand new look.
Please let me know how this new format works for you – all comments regarding the web page and this email are welcome!
Thanks,
Finn Arne Jørgensen
Finn Arne Jørgensen successfully defended his PhD dissertation “The infrastructure of everyday environmentalism: Tomra and the reverse vending machine, 1970-2000” Friday November 23, 2007. The dissertation examines the parallel technical development of reverse vending machines for the return of empty beverage containers and the cultural context of beverage container recycling.
For more information, see http://finnarne.jorgensenweb.net/
December 13-15, 2007, Stony Brook University
Though we Americans largely assume them under control, industrial hazards have quietly turned into one of the world’s foremost killers. The global burden of deaths from work-related disease and injury alone in 1999, was 1.1 million, roughly the same toll as from malaria, and not counting the millions more who perished from pollution and other industrial exposures outside the workplace. Most experts project these numbers will rise over the first half of the 21st century (WHO 1999), based on a continuing up-surge in the transnational movements of capital, companies, commodities, and people between nations that we have come to know as globalization. These trends, and episodes such as the recent discovery of lead-contaminated toys, have raised new concerns about the limits to national projects of environmental and occupational hazard control. The time is ripe for scholarly exploration and analysis of just how industrial hazards and their remedies have varied and traveled from nation to nation, place to place, across our globalizing world.
An international conference on the historical relationship between industrial hazards and globalization will be held December 13-15, 2007, at Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, N.Y. The conference will draw together scholars from many corners of the U.S. as well as the U.K., Europe, Asia and Australia. Among the nearly thirty scholars in attendance, historians, joined by geographers, sociologists and anthropologists, and contemporary health practitioners, will present on-going work on the following themes:
* the making of hazardous industries in developing as well as the developed nations.
* knowing and controlling industrial hazards.
* cross-national passages in the making, recognition and remedy of industrial hazards.
* comparative and supra-national approaches to the history of industrial hazard.
On Thursday afternoon of the 13th, the conference will begin with two sessions on contemporary sessions on hazardous industries in the developing world. These sessions are open without registration to the public. Registration is required for succeeding sessions, which will revolve around discussions of pre-circulated papers. These papers will focus especially on two more recent periods of global economic integration, the late nineteenth/early twentieth and the later twentieth centuries. They will take up industries from mining to railroads to petrochemicals, and hazards from accidents to dust to air pollution to nuclear plants. Registered participants will have the opportunity to read the papers and participate in the discussions about ongoing research.
Download the Dangerous Trade Flyer
We’re continuing to the ‘Lost in Transcription’ project, exploring meanings conveyed in oral interviews but not in their transcripts.
where you can find, as well, three of our papers on this and related themes.
Comments welcome, for we’ve British Columbia and New Brunswick work in train and two more years to refine.
Jon van der veen jvanderveen@gmail.com
ISTAS is the annual symposium of the IEEE Society on Social Implications of Technology.
The scope of ISTAS 08 will include research on:
* Designing and developing ICT with and for citizens, groups and communities.
Web site: http://istas08.ca
Contact: Bill.McIver@nrc.ca
Joy Parr shares this with us:
http://www.acqs.org/qc_studies_journal/table_of_contents.html
Québec Studies 42
Fall 2006/Winter 2007
Sharing Waters: St. Lawrence-Great Lakes
A special issue coordinated by Vincent Desroches and Sylvie Paquerot
Vincent Desroches and Sylvie Paquerot Sharing the Waters: The challenges of Understanding the Other
Madeleine Cantin-Cumyn Legal Status of Water in Quebec
Nicolas Milot and Laurent Lepage The Integrated Management of the St. Lawrence River
Brian Slack and Claude Comtois Short Sea Shipping: The Need for a Realistic Assessment
Sébastien Blouin et Frédéric Lasserre Eau potable au Québec dans la vallée du Saint-Laurent: les impacts des changements climatiques
Alexandre Brun Gestion de l’eau au Québec: quand la politique de l’eau et politique agricole se conjuguent à l’imparfait
Jean-François Bibeault and Christiane Hudon Water Availability: An Overview of Issues and Future Challenges for the St. Lawrence River
Patrick Forrest The Legal Geography of Water Exports: A Case Study of the Transboundary Municipal Water Supplies between Stanstead (Québec) and Derby Line (Vermont)
Sylvie Paquerot The Challenges of Legitimate Governance of the Great Lakes and of the St. Lawrence: Between Ecosystem Considerations, Diversity, and Fragmentation
Amy Lovecraft Bridging the Biophysical and Social
The
Jeffrey Stine, Mixing the Waters: Environment, Politics, and the Building of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway
James Rodger Fleming and Henry A. Gemery, eds., Science, Technology, and the Environment: Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Joel A. Tarr, The Search for the Ultimate Sink: Urban Pollution in Historical Perspective
James C. Williams, Energy and the Making of Modern
Dale H. Porter, The
William McGucken,
Hugh S. Gorman, Redefining Efficiency: Pollution Concerns, Regulatory Mechanisms, and Technological Change in the
Jonathan Richmond, Transport of Delight: The Mythical Conception of Rail Transit in
Stephen Cutcliffe, STS Program, 327 Maginnes Hall, Lehigh University, 9 West Packer Ave.,
Phone 610-758-3350
e-mail: stephen.cutcliffe@lehigh.edu.
I remain a professor at the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University. Every fall my wife Deborah, a geographer at the College of Staten Island/City University of New York, and I teach a course on land-use planning at the Environmental Studies Program at Princeton University. We were in South Dakota in June filming a forthcoming documentary tentatively titled “Buffalo Commons: Return of the Buffalo.” We continue our Buffalo Commons work on the land-use future of the Great Plains and are expanding our approach to other depopulating places such as the Lower Mississippi Delta; Buffalo, New York; and comparable regions and cities abroad. I was interviewed twice on National Public Radio this summer, and in August a front-page story on our Buffalo Commons work appeared in USA Today.
Pat Munday wrote a post on the 2007 SHOT Envirotech Roundtable in his blog Ecorover. See it here: http://ecorover.blogspot.com/2007/10/ecorover-goes-to-washington-dc.html