| Title | Crisis Narratives from the Dutch Soyacene |
|---|---|
| Subtitle | Regional Sustainability Histories at Sites of Soy Consumption |
| Contributor | Erik van der Vleuten(author) |
| Evelien de Hoop(author) | |
| Landing page | https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv309h1fx.19 |
| License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ |
| Copyright | Erik van der Vleuten; Evelien de Hoop |
| Publisher | The White Horse Press |
| Published on | 2022-11-01 |
| Page range | pp. 265–288 |
| Print length | 24 pages |
| Language | English (Original) |
Erik van der Vleuten teaches at Eindhoven University of Technology and researches the connected histories of technology and socioecological change in an infrastructured world. Earlier work includes Europe's Infrastructure Transition: Economy, War, Nature (2015, with Per Högselius and Arne Kaijser); Engineering the Future, Understanding the Past: A Social History of Technology (2017, with Ruth Oldenziel and Mila Davids); and Historicising Entanglements: Science, Technology and Socio-ecological Change in the Postcolonial Anthropocene (special issue of Global Environment 15 (2) (2022), with Evelien de Hoop, Aarthi Shridhar and Claiton M. da Silva). His current research and education focus on diverse and contested sustainability histories and futures of distant-yet-connected regions across the globe. See https: //www. eindhovenhistorylab. nl/erik-van-der-vleuten/
Evelien de Hoop is based at the transdisciplinary Athena Institute (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL). With a background in Science and Technology Studies, she works with scholars from diverse disciplines and societal stakeholders to address contemporary health and sustainability challenges. Empirical foci include sustainable Dutch countrysides, Indian farmers' engagements with biofuels, and inclusive food systems in deprived urban areas across Europe. She mobilises research on the historical and transnational entanglements of contemporary challenges, with a particular focus on knowledge politics, to render her contemporary work historically-sensitive and pluralise ways of thinking about the future. She recently edited Historicising Entanglements: Science, Technology and Socio-ecological Change in the Postcolonial Anthropocene (special issue of Global Environment 15 (2) (2022), with Aarthi Shridhar, Claiton M. da Silva and Erik van der Vleuten).