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The Cold War and environmental history: complementary fields
Authors:Simo Laakkonen  Viktor Pál  Richard Tucker
Institution:1. Degree Programme of Cultural Production and Landscape Studies, University of Turku, Pori University Consortium, Pori, Finland;2. International Environmental History Group (IEHG), School of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland;3. School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
Abstract:The Cold War was not only for the hearts and minds of people, it was also for their mouths and bellies, that is, for food, energy and raw materials. This signified a global power struggle over the control of natural resources. In addition to the increasing consumption of natural resources and resulting pollution, the destructive capacity of the weapons of mass destruction compelled human beings to recognise that their activities could ultimately endanger the planet earth. The Cold War was a propagator and framework for the birth of global catastrophism and also for the emergence of a global environmental awareness. Nature, its exploitation and also gradually its protection, opened up yet another front in the Cold War. Yet the relationship between the Cold War and the environment was reciprocal. On the one hand, concerns over environmental contamination or destruction called into question the meaningfulness of the Cold War itself. On the other hand, the specific sociopolitical structures of the Cold War deeply affected the emergence of environmental ideas, ideals, organisations and activities in different continents.
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