This is the 273rd post in my series that explores the most-used words in the top stories shared among Environmental Historians and Environmental Humanities scholars on Twitter each week.
Here are the top articles among environmental historians and humanities scholars this past week (May 23, 2022 – May 29, 2022):
Monday: “3 big issues in higher education demand the new government’s attention” by Catharine Coleborne, The Conversation
Tuesday: “The Unsettled Plain: An Environmental History of the Late Ottoman Frontier” by Chris Gratien, Stanford University Press, 2022.
Wednesday: “Indigenous activists among Goldman environmental prize winners” by Nina Lakhani, The Guardian
Thursday: “Tigray In Ethiopia Was An Environmental Success Story – But The War Is Undoing Decades Of Regreening,” Climate To
Friday: “Climate Change and the Military: Examining the Pentagon’s Integration of National Security Interests and Environmental Goals under Clinton” edited by Burkely Hermann, National Security Archive
Saturday: “Malcolm Woolf on LinkedIn: Never has industry…” by Malcolm Woolf, LinkedIn
Sunday: “China punishes local officials for falsifying economic data,” Reuters
Top Words
- U.S
- climate
- Environmental
- environmental
- military
- change
- Climate
- Document
- Change
- Pentagon
