This guide was created for students enrolled in "Environmental Anthropology" (ANT 4403 / ANG 5022). This course critically examines the diversity of human-nature relationships Environmental Anthropology critically examines the diversity of human-nature relationships - past, present, and emergent. The course explores environmental and ecological concepts and questions from an anthropological perspective and analyzes the growing global discourse surrounding questions of climate change, pollution, species and habitat loss, and conservation. Readings and assignments highlight the ways that people living in different cultural and ecological contexts often conceive of, and experience, the natural world in different ways.
If you get stuck during your research, the UWF Libraries are here to help
For one-on-one research help, contact me to set up a research consultation: mgonzalez@uwf.edu
Many of our resources may be accessed only by current UWF students, faculty, and staff. For Remote Access (off-campus), you must authenticate yourself as a valid UWF user before connecting to these resources. Click the Access tab on the library home page to log in using your Argonet credentials. When the Access tab is GREEN, you have full access. If the tab is RED, you are not logged in to the library's proxy server.