Glenn Albrecht


Glenn Albrecht was Professor of Sustainability at Murdoch University in Western Australia. He retired in 2014. He is an honorary fellow in the School Of Geosciences of the University of Sydney.
In 2008, Albrecht finished as the Associate Professor in Environmental Studies in University of Newcastle in New South Wales. He has become known for coining the neologism solastalgia.

Biography

Glenn Albrecht is an environmental philosopher with both theoretical and applied interests in the relationship between ecosystem and human health. He has pioneered the research domain of 'psychoterratic' or earth related mental health conditions with the concept of 'solastalgia' or the lived experience of negative environmental change. He also has publications in the field of animal ethics including the ethics of relocating endangered species in the face of climate change pressures.
Glenn Albrecht's most recent publication is 'Earth Emotions: New Words for a New World', published in May 2019 by Cornell University Press. The book has been translated into French and will be released in Paris in late February, 2020. The French title is 'Les émotions de la Terre - Des nouveau mots pour un nouveau monde'. Publisher: Les Liens Qui Libèrent.
He has been published in many peer reviewed journals and has recently completed and published book chapters on his research interests. With colleagues, Nick Higginbotham and Linda Connor under Australian Research Council Discovery Project grants, Glenn has researched the impact of mining in the Upper Hunter Region of NSW, Australia, and now, the impact of climate change on communities, again in the Hunter Region. Glenn has also been involved as a Chief Investigator in ARC Discovery Project research on the social and ethical aspects of the thoroughbred horse industry worldwide.
Glenn Albrecht is a pioneer of transdisciplinary thinking and, with Higginbotham and Connor produced a major book on this topic, Health Social Science: A Transdisciplinary and Complexity Perspective with Oxford University Press in 2001. His current major research interest, the positive and negative psychological, emotional and cultural relationships people have to place and its transformation is one that sees him having an international research profile.