All Stories

  1. Soviet and Russian perspectives on geoengineering and climate management
  2. Conclusion
  3. Introduction
  4. Shaping human-nature interaction
  5. Measuring and assessing the natural environment
  6. Russia and society-nature interaction in the 21st Century
  7. Understanding the natural environment and the growing influence of humankind on the Earth system
  8. Natural and anthropogenic climate change understanding in the Soviet Union, 1960s–1980s
  9. Imagining climates past, present and future: Soviet contributions to the science of anthropogenic climate change, 1953–1991
  10. The Soviet Environmental Legacy
  11. Soviet Climate Change Science
  12. Development of Russian Environmental Thought
  13. A Russian geographical tradition? The contested canon of Russian and Soviet geography, 1884–1953
  14. Climate modification and climate change debates in the Soviet Union
  15. Russian Origins of the Biosphere Concept
  16. Emotion and Fieldwork
  17. Russia’s Contemporary Environmental Movement
  18. Science and the Cold War
  19. Second World
  20. Scientific, Institutional and Personal Rivalries among Soviet Geographers in the Late Stalin Era
  21. Geographically touring the eastern bloc: British geography, travel cultures and the Cold War
  22. Firm finances, weather derivatives and geography
  23. Totalitarianism and geography: L. S. Berg and the defence of an academic discipline in the age of Stalin
  24. Encountering soviet geography: oral histories of British geographical studies of the USSR and Eastern Europe 1945–1991
  25. Landscape Science: A Russian Geographical Tradition
  26. Preface
  27. Trans-national approaches to locally situated concerns: Exploring the meanings of post-socialist space
  28. V.I. Vernadsky and the noosphere concept: Russian understandings of society–nature interaction
  29. Environmental policy in a wider Europe
  30. Russian environmentalism
  31. Structural Economic Change and the Natural Environment in the Russian Federation