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PRESENTED BY PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER

THE NATION STATE E TH ENVIRONMENT the history and future of environmental diplomacy

FRIDAY SATURDAY 9:30–11:30 AM PANEL I: NATIONAL BORDERS 8:30–10:30 AM PANEL IV: National AND THE MASTERY OF THE ENVIRONMENT Greg Bankoff, University of Hull, “Making Parks Out of Sovereignty and Water Resources Making War: Transnational Nature Conservation and the Mark Lawrence (Chair), University of at Austin Legacy of Conflict” Erika Bsumek (Chair), University of Texas at Austin APRIL Judith Shapiro, , “ Nation-Building Janet Davis, University of Texas at Austin, “Bird Day: Mary Carmel Finley, University of California–San Diego, through Nature-Conquest: Resource Capture and Identity Promoting the Gospel of Kindness in the U.S. Empire, “Global Borders and the Fish that Ignore Them” on China’s Frontiers” 1898–1940” Benedict J. Colombi, University of Arizona, Seth Garfield, University of Texas at Austin, Comment: Kairn Klieman, “The Economics of Dam Building: The Nez Perce Tribe and “ Crave the Rain Forest: Transnational Actors, Traditional Transnational Environments” 1 6 - 1 8 Peoples, and the Remaking of the Brazilian Amazon, 1940–1990” 3:30–5:30 PM PANEL III : International Mark Cioc, University of California–Santa Cruz, “Europe’s Management of Environmental Toxins River: The Rhine as Prelude to Transnational Cooperation AT&T CENTER ON THE UNIVERSITY Gregory Cushman, University of Kansas, “The Ecology and the Common Market” of Liberation: Humboldtian Science and South America’s William Doolittle (Chair), University of Texas at Austin OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN CAMPUS First Postcolonial States” Comment: Kathleen Brosnan, University of Houston David Kinkela, State University of New York–Fredonia, Comment: Frank de la Teja, “E xporting DDT in the Age of Ecology: The Paradox of U.S. Pesticide Regulation” 11 AM-1 PM CONCLUDING ROUNDTABLE: : LOOKING TOWARD THE FUTURE THURSDAY 1–3 PM PANEL II The Nation-State and David Zierler, Office of the Historian, U.S. Department Migratory Wildlife of State, “The End of Agent Orange: Transnational JOSHUA BUSBY (Moderator), Lyndon B. Johnson School of 7:30-9 PM WELCOME AND KEYNOTE ADDRESS Environmentalism and the Vietnam War” Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin John McKiernan–Gonzales (Chair), University of Texas Welcome: Terri Givens, Vice , University of Texas at Austin James McWilliams, Texas State University, Tzeporah Berman, Co-Founder and Program Director for at Austin, and Alan Tully, Chair, Department of History, “From Internationalism to Isolationism: Entomology and the ForestEthics University of Texas at Austin Kurk Dorsey, University of New Hampshire, Transition from Biological to Chemical Insect Control in the “ N ational Sovereignty, an International Agency, and a , 1850–1920” J. Robert Cox, Professor of Communication Studies, Keynote: John McNeill, , Transnational Movement” University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill, and former “The Environmental History of the Cold War, 1945–????” Comment: Martin Melosi, University of Houston President of the Sierra Club

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