New Scholarship: “Re-Thinking Colonialism to Prepare for the Impacts of Rapid Environmental Change”

Nicholas James Reo and Angela K. Parker have published “Re-Thinking Colonialism to Prepare for the Impacts of Rapid Environmental Change” in Climatic Change. Highly recommended.

Here is the abstract:

This essay demonstrates how key concepts from ecology can be applied within historical analyses in order to gain insights regarding contemporary environmental change. We employ a coupled human and natural systems conceptual framework in a nascent historical analysis of rapid societal and environmental change in colonial New England, where European colonization led to stark and rapid transformations. Introduced diseases reduced indigenous communities to a fraction of their pre-contact levels. European agriculture and associated pest species, deforestation and overharvest of ecologically influential species were among key aspects of the rapid changes in colonial New England. Cross-continental biotic introductions initiated reinforcing feedback loops that accelerated the transition of human and natural systems into novel states. Integrating colonial history and ecology can help identify important interactions between human and natural systems useful for contemporary societies adjusting to environmental change.

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Dr. Nick Reo’s New Program at Dartmouth!

Our Turtle Talk friend Dr. Nick Reo has started a new website — Ecosystems, Societies & Knowledge research group. Check it out.

Here’s Nick (right) exploring an ecosystem:

Here’s the program description:

Our group works with American Indian Tribes and other Native peoples on applied research concerning the management and use of natural resources. We explore the application, preservation and outcomes of traditional resource management systems that are embodiments of tribal traditional ecological knowledge. We also study the political interactions that occur between tribes and their neighbors surrounding natural resource issues, including cross-boundary cooperation, conflict and co-management of ecosystems and subsistence resources.

 

 

CONGRATS to Dr. Nick Reo!!!!!

It’s belated by a few days, but our own Nick Reo is now Dr. Nick! Here’s a pic:

Dr. Nick’s dissertation defense was last Friday, and he rocked! And passed.