| Title | Reconsidering Justice in Past Cities |
|---|---|
| Subtitle | When Environmental and Social Dimensions Meet |
| Contributor | Geneviève Massard-Guilbaud(author) |
| Richard Rodger(author) | |
| Landing page | https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv289dvs1.5 |
| License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ |
| Copyright | Geneviève Massard-Guilbaud; Richard Rodger |
| Publisher | The White Horse Press |
| Published on | 2011-01-31 |
| Page range | pp. 1–40 |
| Print length | 40 pages |
| Language | English (Original) |
Geneviève Massard-Guilbaud is Professor at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris, where she holds a chair in Environmental History. Her last book, Histoire de la pollution industrielle, France 1789-1914, was published in 2010 (Paris: EHESS). She is currently completing, with Stephen Mosley, a book entitled Common Ground: Integrating the Social and Environmental in History (forthcoming, Newcastle: CSP). Since 2007 she has been the president of the European Society for Environmental History. In France, she initiated the RUCHE (Scholarly Network of Researchers in Environmental History). At the beginning of 2010 she was appointed by the Humanities and Social Sciences Institute and the Ecology and Environment Institute of the CNRS to lead their common interdisciplinary research network in Environmental History.
Richard Rodger is Professor of Economic and Social History at Edinburgh University. He has published widely on the economic, business and urban history of Britain since 1800, was editor of Urban History from 1987-2007, and joint editor for a series of forty books under the title of ‘Historical Urban Studies’, published by Ashgate. His book The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century was awarded the Frank Watson Prize for works on Scottish history. Ongoing research includes a project on the development of public and environmental health in Victorian Scotland. In recognition of his contributions to the study of economic and social history, Rodger was elected to the Academy of Social Sciences in 2004.