[2], 38 p. ; 19 cm. (8vo) ; Author's name appears in publisher's note on verso of t.p. of the first part, reprinted in Philadelphia in 1800 (Evans 37418).
The first book length study of the environmental justice movement, tourism, and the links between race, class, and waste.Tourism is at once both a beloved pastime and a denigrated form of popular culture. Romanticized for its promise of pleasure, tourism is also potentially toxic, enabling the deadly exploitation of the cultures and environments visited. For many decades, the environmental justice movement has offered -toxic tours,- non-commercial trips intended to highlight people and locales polluted by poisonous chemicals. Out of these efforts and their popular reception, a new understand
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Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
In: St. Augustine papers: negro passes and permits--https://archives.lib.fsu.edu/repositories/10/resources/114
Letter to Ms. Putnam explaining how "Peyton" was given a mistaken slip of paper instead of the pass written for them. Both the mistaken paper and the slip were sent to Ms. Putnam to better explain how this mishap could have taken place. This explanation was sent "to save the boy from a whipping" and in hopes to be enough without a fine.
In: St. Augustine papers: negro passes and permits--https://archives.lib.fsu.edu/repositories/10/resources/114
Letter to Ms. Putnam explaining how "Peyton" was given a mistaken slip of paper instead of the pass written for them. Both the mistaken paper and the slip were sent to Ms. Putnam to better explain how this mishap could have taken place. This explanation was sent "to save the boy from a whipping" and in hopes to be enough without a fine.
prononcée par M. de la Harpe, dans la séance du mardi soir 24 août ; Volltext // Exemplar mit der Signatur: Bamberg, Staatsbibliothek -- Bip.Rev.o.5(2#4