Selcer explores how and why the concept of a global-scale environment emerged as a political reality and concern in the post WWII era of development politics.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Science, Global Governance, and the Environment
1. Behind the Burlap Curtain
2. Conserving the World Community
3. Men Against the Desert
4. The Soil Map of the World and the Politics of Scale
5. Locating the Global Environment
6. Spaceship Earth in the Age of Fracture
Conclusion: The View from a Utopia’s Ruins
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Perrin Selcer is an assistant professor in the History Department and Program in the Environment at the University of Michigan.
Perrin Selcer shows the persistent attempts by UN-related
researchers to produce global citizenship. In the process, he shows
convincingly, a global epistemic community was created.
Impressively researched, The Postwar Origins of the Global
Environment is highly original. An authoritative study.
*Alison Bashford, author of Global Population: History,
Geopolitics and Life on Earth*
The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment reveals the hidden
history of international society’s formative ideas. Before NGOs,
before a world community could have moral weight, there had to be a
theory of reform that was both widely shared and planetary in
scale. Selcer shows how foundational beliefs of
globalism—development, conservation, world citizenship, localism,
the biosphere—originated among an international community of
scientists and activists seeking answers for aggression, disease,
and scarcity. Along the way are vivid portraits of iconic thinkers,
such as Margaret Mead, Gunnar Myrdal, George Kennan, who often
formed unexpected alliances. An absorbing, thoroughly detailed
account.
*Nick Cullather, Indiana University, Bloomington*
Selcer’s path-breaking study provides an original and
thought-provoking account of the origins of global environmentalism
within the world of mid-twentieth-century internationalism and its
associated movements. His work brims with novel and important
insights that will reshape scholarship in international history,
environmental history, and the history of science.
*Jessica Wang, University of British Columbia*
An engaging microhistory.
*Choice*
In these accounts, the environment was a cause for diplomats and
scientists, not just wild-haired, Birkenstock-clad activists. In
this sense, [The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment] move
environmental history from the periphery to the mainstream of
postwar intellectual and political history.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
Provides a useful nonlinear understanding of a commonly overlooked
postwar success: the creation of potential energy stored in a
transnational understanding of ecology that awaits a receptive
political climate for influence and application by technocrats.
*Journal of American History*
An insightful book. Selcer has made a valuable contribution to the
growing body of scholarship that links environmental history, the
history of science, and international history.
*Diplomatic History*
A major contribution to the global history of environmental
sciences and politics that lays new ground for
future research.
*Isis*
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