Andrew Sluyter

Andrew Sluyter (born 1958) is an American social scientist who currently teaches as a professor in the Geography and Anthropology Department of the Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. His interests are the environmental history and historical, cultural, and political ecology of the colonization of the Americas. He has made various contributions to the theorization of colonialism and landscape, the critique of neo-environmental determinism, to understanding pre-colonial and colonial agriculture and environmental change in Mexico, to revealing African contributions to establishing cattle ranching in the Americas, and to the historical geographies of Hispanics and Latinos in New Orleans. With the publication of ''[http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300179927 Black Ranching Frontiers: African Cattle Herders of the Atlantic World, 1500–1900]'' (Yale University Press, 2012) and a 2012–13 Digital Innovation Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies, he has joined a growing number of scholars from multiple disciplines working from the perspective of Atlantic History and using the tools of the Digital Humanities. His latest book, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=H_QACwAAQBAJ Hispanic and Latino New Orleans: Immigration and Identity since the Eighteenth Century]'' (LSU Press, 2015), co-authored with Case Watkins, James Chaney, and Annie M. Gibson, was awarded the [http://news.aag.org/2016/03/2015-aag-book-awards/ 2015 John Brinckerhoff Jackson Book Prize] by the American Association of Geographers. Provided by Wikipedia
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