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Not Even Past

Episode 118: The Caribbean Roots of Biodiversity

Host: Christopher Rose, Department of History
Guest: Megan Raby, Department of History

Biodiversity has been a key concept in international conservation since the 1980s, yet historians have paid little attention to its origins. Uncovering its roots in tropical fieldwork and the southward expansion of U.S. empire at the turn of the twentieth century, ecologists took advantage of growing U.S. landholdings in the circum-Caribbean by establishing permanent field stations for long-term, basic tropical research.

Megan Raby describes how, from these outposts of U.S. science, a growing community of American “tropical biologists” developed both the key scientific concepts and the values embedded in the modern discourse of biodiversity.

https://notevenpast.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/15-Minute-History-Megan-Raby-1.mp3

Related posts:

Student Showcase – Oil and Gas Drilling in the Gulf of Mexico “Her Program’s Progress” Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation, by Karl Jacoby (2003) Student Showcase – “America’s Dirty Little Secret”: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment

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