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Dive into the research topics where John Soluri is active.

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Featured researches published by John Soluri.


Cab Reviews: Perspectives in Agriculture, Veterinary Science, Nutrition and Natural Resources | 2011

Effects of industrial agriculture on climate change and the mitigation potential of small-scale agro-ecological farms

Brenda B. Lin; M. Jahi Chappell; John Vandermeer; Gerald R. Smith; Eileen Quintero; Rachel Bezner-Kerr; Daniel M. Griffith; Stuart R. Ketcham; Steven C. Latta; Philip McMichael; Krista L. McGuire; Ron Nigh; Dianne Rocheleau; John Soluri; Ivette Perfecto

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), agriculture is responsible for 10–12% of total global anthropogenic emissions and almost a quarter of the continuing increase of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Not all forms of agriculture, however, have equivalent impacts on global warming. Industrial agriculture contributes significantly to global warming, representing a large majority of total agriculture-related GHG emissions. Alternatively, ecologically based methods for agricultural production, predominantly used on small-scale farms, are far less energy-consumptive and release fewer GHGs than industrial agricultural production. Besides generating fewer direct emissions, agro-ecological management techniques have the potential to sequester more GHGs than industrial agriculture. Here, we review the literature on the contributions of agriculture to climate change and show the extent of GHG contributions from the industrial agricultural system and the potential of agro-ecological smallholder agriculture to help reduce GHG emissions. These reductions are achieved in three broad areas when compared with the industrial agricultural system: (1) a decrease in materials used and fluxes involved in the release of GHGs based on agricultural crop management choices; (2) a decrease in fluxes involved in livestock production and pasture management; and (3) a reduction in the transportation of agricultural inputs, outputs and products through an increased emphasis on local food systems. Although there are a number of barriers and challenges towards adopting small-scale agroecological methods on the large scale, appropriate incentives can lead to incremental steps towards agro-ecological management that may be able to reduce and mitigate GHG emissions from the agricultural sector.


Environmental History | 2002

Accounting for Taste Export Bananas, Mass Markets, and Panama Disease

John Soluri


Environmental History | 2005

What's Next for Environmental History?

Adam Rome; Michael Bess; Tamara Giles-Vernick; Angela Gugliotta; Ramachandra Guha; Marcus Hall; Susan D. Jones; Thomas Lekan; Michael Lewis; Robert B. Marks; James C. McCann; Tom McCarthy; J. R. McNeill; Linda Nash; Philip J. Pauly; Steve Pyne; Harriet Ritvo; Christine Meisner Rosen; Edmund Russell; Paul Sabin; Douglas Cazaux Sackman; Daniel W. Schneider; Andrew Sluyter; John Soluri; Ellen Stroud; Paul S. Sutter; William M. Tsutsui; Petra J. E. M. van Dam; Lance van Sittert


International Labor and Working-class History | 2014

Labor, Rematerialized: Putting Environments to Work in the Americas

John Soluri


Western Historical Quarterly | 2018

Farming across Borders: A Transnational History of the North American West. Connecting the Greater West Series. Edited by Sterling Evans

John Soluri


Journal of Historical Geography | 2016

La Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory, Thomas Miller Klubock. Duke University Press, Durham (2014), 416, US

John Soluri


Journal of Historical Geography | 2016

27.95 paperback

John Soluri


Journal of Historical Geography | 2015

La Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory

John Soluri


OAH Magazine of History | 2011

Thomas MillerKlubockLa Frontera: Forests and Ecological Conflict in Chile's Frontier Territory2014Duke University PressDurham416US

John Soluri


The American Historical Review | 2008

27.95 paperback

John Soluri

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Adam Rome

Pennsylvania State University

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Andrew Sluyter

Louisiana State University

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Brenda B. Lin

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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