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You are here: FRIAS Fellows Fellows 2023/24 Dr. Jennifer Eaglin

Dr. Jennifer Eaglin

The Ohio State University
History

External Junior Fellow
Balzan Fellow
Februar 2022 - Juli 2022

CV

Jennifer Eaglin is an assistant professor of environmental history/sustainability at The Ohio State University. Her research examines the history of alternative energy development in Brazil.

Eaglin’s first book, Sweet Fuel: A Political and Environmental History of Brazilian Ethanol (Oxford University Press, 2022), explores the history of Brazilian sugar-based ethanol development from the 1930s to the 2000s and the associated environmental and social costs that accompanied the industry’s growth.

Eaglin’s work has appeared in Environmental History and Latin American Research Review. She also has a book chapter forthcoming in A Cultural History of the Environment in the Age of Acceleration, Volume 6, edited by Jessica van Horssen (Bloomsbury Press, 2022).

Eaglin’s work has been supported by various organizations, including the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, the Conference of Latin American History, and the Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine.

Selected Publications

FRIAS Research Project

The Rise of the Brazilian Nuclear Industry

Currently, Brazil relies on nuclear energy for less than 5 percent of its energy production, but the industry remains a controversial contributor to the country’s energy matrix because of its perceived and real public health risks. Brazil first sought entry into the small club of countries that controlled the technology of their own nuclear plants in the 1950s but did not gain entry until military officials broke an agreement with the US in favor of German assistance in 1975. My project traces the industry’s development from a military interest to the establishment of the first plant, Angra I, in 1982 to the country’s own nuclear incident in Goiânia, Goiás in 1987 to revived investment in the energy boom of the 2000s. In a country singularly focused on using technology to modernize its international image, “Going Nuclear” reveals how various actors, from government officials to scientists and environmental activists, shaped this domestic energy industry.