The rise of industrial capitalism in the nineteenth century forged a new ecological order in North American and Western European states, radically transforming the environment through science and technology in the name of human progress. Far less known are the dramatic environmental changes experienced by Eastern Europe, in many ways a terra incognita for environmental historians and anthropologists. A New Ecological Order explores, from a historical and ethnographic perspective, the role of state planners, bureaucrats, and experts-engineers, agricultural engineers, geographers, biologists, foresters, and architects-as agents of change in the natural world of Eastern Europe from 1870 to the early twenty-first century.
Contributors consider territories engulfed by empires, from the Habsburg to the Ottoman to tsarist Russia; territories belonging to disintegrating empires; and countries in the Balkan Peninsula, Central and Eastern Europe, and Eurasia. Together, they follow a rhetoric of "correcting nature," a desire to exploit the natural environment and put its resources to work for the sake of developing the economies and infrastructures of modern states. They reveal an eagerness among newly established nation-states, after centuries of imperial economic and political impositions, to import scientific knowledge and new technologies from Western Europe that would aid in their economic development, and how those imports and ideas about nature ultimately shaped local projects and policies.
Industry Reviews
A New Ecological Order is an important contribution to the history of technology, science, and environment of Eastern Europe, and it is well worth the read.-- "Centaurus"
A New Ecological Order provides a new perspective on the ways nature was mobilized by the developmental policies of Eastern Europe's nation-states in their struggle to escape the periphery. Analyzing environmental changes and the way new ideas and new actors have been involved in this complex process, it offers an exceptional contribution to the history and anthropology of the government of nature.--Marc Ab?l?s, ?cole des Hautes ?tudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Convincingly applying the notion of 'regional modernities' to argue for a broadened space for Eastern Europe, A New Ecological Order is a ground-breaking volume tout court. The dozen erudite and meticulously researched studies spanning a period of 150 years show remarkable continuities in the state practices of transforming nature for modernizing purposes regardless of opposing state ideologies. With a keen sense for nuance, the volume subtly distinguishes between dependence and colonial predicament, and demonstrates a convergence of interests despite the asymmetry in power relations between Western and Eastern Europe.--Maria Todorova, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Overall, A New Ecological Order provides credible historical analyses of state intervention in the management of local natural sources aimed at promoting regional modernity in Eastern Europe.-- "CEU Review of Books"
This volume is an indispensable source for understanding the vital, and often tragic, link between the conception of nature as a 'resource' and factor of production and the process of modernization and state making in Eastern Europe. Original, broad-ranging, and analytically sophisticated, A New Ecological Order represents an intellectual port from which much subsequent research will set sail. Stefan Dorondel and Stelu Serban have made a path-breaking contribution to environmental history with this volume.--James C. Scott, Yale University