1st Edition

A Global Environmental History of Coastal Dunes

By Joana Gaspar de Freitas Copyright 2025
260 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

260 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book provides a holistic perspective on coastal dunes, highlighting new insights into present-day challenges to show that narratives, along with numbers, graphics, and computer models, have a role to play in climate change science, policymaking, and citizenship awareness. Adopting a cross-disciplinary approach, this book combines fiction, history, and science, to discuss past, present,... Read more

1. Pulling the dunes out of the archives

2. The moving dunes

3. Dealing with sand drift

4. Turning dunes into forests

5. Sowing the sands

6. Crossing the Atlantic

7. Reaching the Pacific

8. The sands of the Indian Ocean

9. Contested practices, unstable environments

10. Dunes as a destination

11. Vanishing coasts

12. Connecting the dots

Biography

Joana Gaspar de Freitas is an environmental historian at the Center for History, in the School of Arts and Humanities, at the University of Lisbon, Portugal. She has held fellowships at the Rachel Carson Center (Munich, 2015), the Linda Hall Library (Kansas City, 2014), and the Instituto de Estudos de Literatura e Tradição (Lisbon, 2011–2018). Between 2018 and 2024, she was the principal investigator of the project "Sea, Sand and People: An Environmental History of Coastal Dunes" (2018–2024), funded by an ERC Starting Grant. She is currently one of the editors of the journal Coastal Studies and Society.