From 1895 to the founding of the United Nations in 1945, the
promising new science of ecology flourished in the British Empire.
Peder Anker asks why ecology expanded so rapidly and how a handful
of influential scientists and politicians established a tripartite
ecology of nature, knowledge, and society.
Patrons in the northern and southern extremes of the Empire, he
argues, urgently needed tools for understanding environmental
history as well as human relations to nature and society in order
to set policies for the management of natural resources and to
effect social control of natives and white settlement. Holists such
as Jan Christian Smuts and mechanists such as Arthur George Tansley
vied for the right to control and carry out ecological research
throughout the British Empire and to lay a foundation of economic
and social policy that extended from Spitsbergen to Cape Town.
The enlargement of the field from botany to human ecology
required a broader methodological base, and ecologists drew
especially on psychology and economy. They incorporated those
methodologies and created a new ecological order for environmental,
economic, and social management of the Empire.
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