Journal of Global History (JGH)
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globalhistjnl.bsky.social
Journal of Global History (JGH)
@globalhistjnl.bsky.social
The Journal of Global History is an open access journal published by Cambridge University Press. It aims to be the leading scholarly outlet for innovative analyses of global historical phenomena.
Raf De Bont (@rafdebont.bsky.social) discusses how computers changed zoos, touching upon databases, ‘infrastructural globalism’ and transcontinental flows of Siberian tigers!

Read it here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...
A computerised ark: The International Species Information System (ISIS) and the laborious re-ordering of the zoo world | Journal of Global History | Cambridge Core
A computerised ark: The International Species Information System (ISIS) and the laborious re-ordering of the zoo world - Volume 20 Issue 2
doi.org
August 8, 2025 at 12:36 PM
Johanna Gautier Morin examines the contributions of a generation of women who reshaped CEPAL’s development agenda by advocating for the integration of gender perspectives into regional policies.

Read it here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...
The women’s faces of development in Latin America and the Caribbean: The first generation of Cepalinas (1960s–1980s) | Journal of Global History | Cambridge Core
The women’s faces of development in Latin America and the Caribbean: The first generation of Cepalinas (1960s–1980s) - Volume 20 Issue 2
doi.org
August 8, 2025 at 12:36 PM
Hia Sen examines how India and Indian children mattered to the internationalist imaginaries that the Church Missionary Society (CMS) promoted from the 1920s.

Read it here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...
Voyaging into a Christian World: Indian children and the Church Missionary Society’s project of world-making, 1920s–1940s | Journal of Global History | Cambridge Core
Voyaging into a Christian World: Indian children and the Church Missionary Society’s project of world-making, 1920s–1940s - Volume 20 Issue 2
doi.org
August 8, 2025 at 12:36 PM
Tom Long (‪@tomlongphd.bsky.social‬) and Carsten-Andreas Schulz (@caschulz.bsky.social) highlight the broader repercussions of late nineteenth-century ‘high imperialism’ and reassess the nature of Latin American anti-imperialism.

Read it here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...
Seeing the Berlin Conference from the periphery: Latin American reactions to imperialism elsewhere, 1884–85 | Journal of Global History | Cambridge Core
Seeing the Berlin Conference from the periphery: Latin American reactions to imperialism elsewhere, 1884–85 - Volume 20 Issue 2
doi.org
August 8, 2025 at 12:36 PM
Freg Stokes et al. show how Indigenous resistance assisted in the conservation of South American tropical forests, acting as a significant factor in both regional and global environmental history.

Read it here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...
Tropical deforestation and Indigenous resistance over the longue durée in South America | Journal of Global History | Cambridge Core
Tropical deforestation and Indigenous resistance over the longue durée in South America - Volume 20 Issue 2
doi.org
August 8, 2025 at 12:36 PM