Water and Environment in Latin America

This course examines the environmental history of Latin America through the lens of

water. From pre-Columbian irrigation canals and sacred lakes, to colonial drainage

projects, sugar mills, hydraulic mining, hurricanes, hydroelectric dams, and contemporary

water wars, the course emphasizes the centrality of water to power, technology, labor, and

environmental justice. Readings will combine classic environmental history texts with

newer scholarship, while films and digital projects will highlight lived experiences and

applied approaches to environmental history. This course will challenge History majors

and minors to apply analytical skills to ecological topics. Students will refine writing,

research, and presentation abilities, and practice integrating environmental history with

interdisciplinary perspectives, including ethics, political ecology, and digital humanities.

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  • Precolonial
  • Conquest/Early Colonial
  • Late colonial/Independence Era
  • Nineteenth Century
  • Twentieth Century
  • Twenty-First Century/Contemporary
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