PSAE Research Series
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This new series is an outgrowth of the African Studies Center’s Program for the Study of the African Environment (PSAE). The PSAE Research Series presents the results of ongoing research in African environmental studies and reflects the varied research interests and interdisciplinary perspective of Boston University scholars and their international collaborators. This series makes the results of current research on African environmental issues available to a wide audience at a modest cost. Papers in the series are suitable for use in undergraduate and graduate courses dealing with human ecology, anthropology, environmental archaeology, environmental history, public health, resource management, and international development.
Recently Added
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Damming the empire: British attitudes on hydropower development in Africa, 1917-1960
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2008) -
Kings and farmers: the urban development of Aksum, Ethiopia: ca. 500 BC - AD 1500
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2008) -
"Like leaves fallen by wind": landscape, memory, and post-conflict restoration in Mozambique, 1992-2002
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2010) -
A reprise and renewal: African agricultural historiography
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2018) -
Geographical studies of Sub-Saharan Africa: a bibliography
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2018) -
Deposing the malevolent spirit: a historical cultural ecology of malaria in northwest Ethiopia
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2011) -
Forest reserves and local rights: German East Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2009) -
"Getting our grass back": knowledge, grazing policy, and practice in Lesotho, ca. 1933-1950s.
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2018) -
Bearing the burdens, reaping the rewards: who benefits from Africa's national parks?
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2010) -
Satellite imagery, landscape history, and disease: mapping and visualizing the agroecology of malaria in Ethiopia.
(Boston University, African Studies Center, 2007)