Environmental Humanities publishes research that examines the complex relationships between human societies and the natural world, particularly in the context of the Anthropocene. The journal explores themes of environmental degradation, urban transformation, and the materiality of ecological processes through interdisciplinary lenses, including ethnography, literary analysis, and critical theory. It investigates how environmental issues are shaped by and shape social, political, and economic forces, often focusing on the entanglement of human and non-human elements.
Geographies of human-animal interactionsEcocriticism and Environmental LiteraturePosthumanist Ethics and ActivismEnvironmental Philosophy and EthicsWater Governance and InfrastructureAnthropological Studies and InsightsClimate Change Communication and PerceptionAmerican Environmental and Regional HistoryHuman-Animal Interaction StudiesReligion, Ecology, and Ethics