Green Europe
MTA
Environmental Change, Resource Management, and Policy from Antiquity to the Present
"Green Europe" offers a comprehensive historical journey through Europe's environmental relationship, illustrating how human intervention, from ancient times to the present, has continually reshaped the continent's landscapes. The book traces the evolution of resource management, governance, and policy across millennia, beginning with early ecologies shaped by ice and the subsequent emergence of agriculture. It highlights how ancient city-states and the Roman Empire built vast infrastructures, transforming forests, rivers, and soils to sustain their populations and power, leaving deep and enduring "footprints" on the land.
The narrative continues through the medieval period, detailing the rise of manorial systems, the management of common lands, and the spread of watermills, all of which intertwined social organization with environmental practices. It then explores how the demand for timber, tar, and metals in the early modern era led to intense forest exploitation and the rise of proto-industry, creating a dynamic of resource frontiers and early regulatory efforts. The transition from the Medieval Warm Period to the Little Ice Age further highlights how climate shocks drove social and agricultural adaptations, necessitating resilient governance strategies for floods, famines, and shifting ecological conditions.
The book delves into the profound environmental transformations of the Industrial Revolution, focusing on the "enclosure" movement that privatized land, the emergence of "cities of smoke" fueled by coal, and the birth of modern environmental policy driven by public health crises like the London Smog. It examines the "invention of sustainability" through scientific forestry and early conservation efforts, alongside the destructive environmental legacies of 20th-century warfare. Later chapters explore Europe's ambitious efforts to "master waters" through extensive dam and canal building, the widespread impact of chemical agriculture, and the continent's pivotal role in global climate politics, from the Kyoto Protocol to the European Green Deal.
Finally, "Green Europe" addresses contemporary environmental challenges and future directions. It discusses the complex ecological and social impacts of post-socialist transitions, the opportunities and dilemmas presented by the rise of renewable energy, and the growing importance of environmental justice and public participation in governance. The book concludes by emphasizing the necessity of adaptation, biodiversity protection through nature-based solutions, and resilient multi-level governance to navigate a warming planet. It argues that understanding Europe's rich environmental history is crucial for designing a sustainable and equitable future, one that integrates local knowledge and addresses the intertwined challenges of human well-being and ecological health.
This book is for readers interested in the long history of human-environment interactions in Europe. It will particularly appeal to students and scholars in environmental history, ecology, economics, law, and public policy, as well as practitioners and citizens seeking to understand the historical roots of contemporary sustainability challenges and governance models.
January 11, 2026
74,547 words
5 hours 13 minutes
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