Review
... this is a valuable collection of essays, particularly useful for the teaching at university level of a new imperial history which refuses to be blind to the often dire environmental consequences of European colonialism./ David Hardiman, associate fellow in history, Warwick University, THES, 23/04/99.
`this is a valuable collection of essays, particularly useful for the teaching at university level of a new imperial history which refuses to be blind to the often dire environmental consequences of European colonialism.' David Hardiman, associate fellow in history, Warwick University, Times Higher Education Supplement
`this is a valuable collection of essays, particularly useful for the teachimg at university level of a new imperial history which refuses to be blind to the often dire environmental consequences of european colonialism.' THES David Hardiman
`The book is extensive in every respect. It account sfor an impressive 1036 pages, and besides its broad regional and disciplinary approach its contents cover a long time span from the stone age to the early 1990s... an important landmark in the field of interdisciplinary environmental research.' Tilman Frasch, Internationales Asienforum
`an interesting book' Philip Stott, Journal of Historical Geography, 27, 2001
`this is a valuable collection of essays, particularly useful for the teaching at university level of a new imperial history which refuses to be blind to the often dire environmental consequences of european colonialism.' THES David Hardiman
About the Author
Richard H. Grove, Senior Research Fellow, Department of Economic History, Research School of Social Science, Institute of Advanced Studies, Australian National University, Canberra. Vinita Damodaran, Lecturer, School of African and Asian Studies, University of Sussex. S. Sangwan, Senior Scientist, History of Science Faculty, National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, New Delhi.