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he following organizations are members of International Consortium of Environmental History organizations (ICEHO).
Membership is open to all organizations or segments of organizations that have an interest in environmental history.
Members may be associations, networks, University departments or schools, non-governmental organizations, historical
societies, museums, and research institutes, among others. Membership is currently $50 (USD) annually. You can find
a membership form here
or download this form
[ ].

American Society for Environmental History (ASEH)
The ASEH aspires to advance a greater understanding of the history of human interaction with the rest of
the natural world, to foster dialogue between humanistic scholarship, environmental science, and other disciplines,
and to support global environmental history efforts that benefit the public as well as the general scholarly community.
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Association of South Asian Environmental
Historians (ASAEH)
The Association of
South Asia Environmental Historians exists to promote the understanding, through scholarly dialogue and discourse,
of the interaction of people and nature in history, humanity’s transformation of the natural world over time, both
benefits and repercussions, and the natural world’s impact on people.
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Australian and New Zealand Environmental History Network (EHN)
EHN promotes the exchange of information and ideas among researchers interested in all aspects of the environmental history of Australia and New Zealand.
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Australian Forest History Society (AFHS)
The Society operates as a network of people interested in the history of Australia's forests and woodlands.
The aim of the Society is to advance historical understanding of human interactions with Australian forest
and woodland environments.
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Czech Geographical Society: Section for Historical
Geography and Environmental History
The Section was founded in 2004 with the major aim of fostering cooperation and communication among Czech scholars involved in historical geography or environmental history. The Section publishes an internet journal - Klaudyan - the only environmental history journal in Czechia.
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European Society for Environmental History (ESEH)
The European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) is a scholarly society that was founded in 1999 to promote
environmental history in Europe, by encouraging and supporting research, teaching and publications in the field.
The Society aims to stimulate dialogue between humanistic scholarship, environmental science and other disciplines.
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Forest History Society
The mission of the Forest History Society is to improve natural resource management and human welfare by bringing
a historical context to environmental decision-making. The Forest History Society (FHS) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit educational
institution that links the past to the future by identifying, collecting, preserving, interpreting, and disseminating
information on the history of interactions between people, forests, and their related resources - timber, water, soil,
forage, fish and wildlife, recreation, and scenic or spiritual values.
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German Historical Institute, Washington, DC (GHI)
The GHI is an independent
institute in Washington, DC, dedicated to the promotion of historical research in the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany
and to the dissemination of historical knowledge.
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IUFRO Research Group 6.07.00
A part of the
International Union of Forestry Research Organizations. Also contains sub-groups interested in tropical forest history,
social and economic forest history, ecological forest history, and the history of hunting culture.
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International Water History Association (IWHA)
The purpose of IWHA is to encourage, promote, and
foster historical understanding of, and research in, the relationship between water and humankind; to foster a stronger
relationship between those engaged in water history and water administrators, engineers, scientists, planners and other
practitioners; to foster public awareness of the role of water in world history and to promote public participation in
resolving water resource issues; to take other actions deemed by the Association to be supportive of its purposes.
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Network In Canadian History &
environment (NiCHE)
NiCHE's core constituency is
made up of history, geography, environmental studies, and natural science researchers, but we have also been pleased
to welcome scholars from forestry, law, archival studies, kinesiology, education, and other fields. Academics from
undergraduate to emeriti, from New York to New Zealand are involved in the network, as are private researchers.
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Otago University, History Department
Otago focuses on the
complex and ever changing relationship between people and the land in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Areas researched include
rural society; gender relations in the rural sector; land transformation; responses to and representations of the
changing landscape; land settlement; the impact of farming upon landscape and indigenous people; the impact of goldmining
on rural landscapes; rural education; environmental history and the history of forestry in New Zealand and the Pacific.
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Sheffield Hallam University - Tourism, Leisure and Environmental
Change Research Unit (TLECRU)
The TLECRU focuses on
the development and evaluation of tourism and leisure in relation to urban greenspace and rural regeneration, biodiversity,
landscape and cultural heritage.
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Sociedad Latinoamericana y Caribeña de Historia Ambiental (SOLCHA)
The objective of SOLCHA is
to encourage research, the debate of ideas, and to promote education in the field of Latin American and Caribbean
Environmental History, through an interdisciplinary perspective. By stimulating the contact among researchers who
adopt this historical perspective, SOLCHA intends to contribute to the understanding of past and present environmental
changes, as well as to cooperate for the construction of more egalitarian and sustainable societies.
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The Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy
Established in 1987, the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy sponsors policy-relevant, interdisciplinary research and forums that link scholarship and education with decision-making. The Center specializes in issues concerning environmental policy and conflict and indigenous nations policy, self government, and economic development.
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