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Wilko Hardenberg, wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter Abteilung III, veröffentlicht Artikel
Zum ArtikelWilko Hardenberg, Research Scholar in Department III, publishes article
Read ArticleWorkshop | Jun 21-Jun 22, 2018 | 09:00 to 18:00
Shifting Baselines, Altered Horizons: Politics, Practice, and Knowledge in Environmental Science and Policy
MoreWorkshop | Jun 21-Jun 22, 2018 | 09:00 to 18:00
Shifting Baselines, Altered Horizons: Politics, Practice, and Knowledge in Environmental Science and Policy
MoreAnthropocene Lectures | Sep 21, 2017 | 17:00 to 18:30
Historians and the Anthropocene: A Discipline and an Interdisciplinary Concept
MoreAnthropocene Lectures | Oct 12, 2017 | 17:00 to 19:00
The Historians’ Task in the Age of the Anthropocene: Finding Hope in Japan?
MoreHow to Live with Bears
No 1
Bears have been on Europeans’ minds lately, as violent encounters with these powerful mammals make international headlines. The state must be able to guarantee local communities personal and economic safety while also defending the right of iconic species to roam areas that were once their historical ranges.
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg
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How to Live with Bears
No 1
Bears have been on Europeans’ minds lately, as violent encounters with these powerful mammals make international headlines. The state must be able to guarantee local communities personal and economic safety while also defending the right of iconic species to roam areas that were once their historical ranges.
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg
More
Into the Fascist Forest—A Real Italian Controversy
No 3
Should we see the forest first and foremost as a forest, a natural landscape that perhaps should be restored, or as a disturbing memory of Mussolini? Ought we to recreate the forest, as a preservation of the memory of the country’s history? Or should we leave it to its destiny and forget about it?
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg
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Into the Fascist Forest—A Real Italian Controversy
No 3
Should we see the forest first and foremost as a forest, a natural landscape that perhaps should be restored, or as a disturbing memory of Mussolini? Ought we to recreate the forest, as a preservation of the memory of the country’s history? Or should we leave it to its destiny and forget about it?
Wilko Graf von Hardenberg
Marco Armiero (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)
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