Routledge Studies in Environment, Culture, and Society

Series editors: Bernhard Glaeser and Heike Egner

This series opens up a forum for advances in environmental studies relating to society and its social, cultural, and economic underpinnings. The underlying assumption guiding this series is that there is an important, and so far little-explored, interaction between societal as well as cultural givens and the ways in which societies both create and respond to environmental issues. As such, this series encourages the exploration of the links between prevalent practices, beliefs and values, as differentially manifested in diverse societies, and the distinct ways in which those societies confront the environment.

1 Human-Nature Interactions in the Anthropocene

Potentials of Social-Ecological Systems Analysis

Edited by Marion Glaser, Gesche Krause, Beate M. W. Ratter and Martin Welp

2 Green Utopianism

Perspectives, Politics and Micro-Practices

Edited by Karin Bradley and Johan Hedrén

3 Learning and Calamities

Practices, Interpretations, Patterns

Edited by Heike Egner, Marén Schorch and Martin Voss

4 Trading Environments

Frontiers, Commercial Knowledge, and Environmental Transformation, 1750–1990

Edited by Gordon M. Winder and Andreas Dix

5 Transdisciplinary Research and Sustainability

Collaboration,

Innovation and Transformation

Edited by Martina Padmanabhan

6 Global Change in Marine Systems

Integrating Natural, Social and Governing Responses

Edited by Patrice Guillotreau, Alida Bundy and R. Ian Perry