please check out my list of forthcoming publications
Co-edited with Philip Olson and Natashe Demos Lekker. Bristol: Bristol University Press. (January 2024).
Lundquist, E., Truong, M.X., Peterson, J.D., Wal, R.V.D. (2025). Birdwatching in the digital age: How technologies shape relationships to birds. Bioscience, 0, p. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biaf047.
Peterson, J., Van Der Wal, R. and Kasperowski, D. (2025) ‘Does eBird Contribute to Environmental Citizenship? A Discourse Analysis’, Citizen Science: Theory and Practice, 10(1), p. 13. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5334/cstp.725.
Peterson, J. D. (2025). Exuberant Life as Existential Anxiety: Fictional Accounts of Human-Algae Relations. Green Letters, 1-16.
Peterson, J., Bezan, S., and Falconer, K. (2024). ‘Blue Death Studies: Theorising the Water-Corpse Interface.” Lagoonscapes, 4, 2: Special Issue Ecologies of Life and Death in the Anthropocene. Eds. P. Karpouzou and N. Zampaki. https://doi.org/10.30687/LGSP/2785-2709/2024/02/004
Von Essen, E. & Peterson, J. (2024). ‘Digital Wildlife Expeditions and their impact on human-wildlife relations: Inside the phenomenon of livestreaming an annual moose migration.’ Digital Geography and Society, 7. pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.diggeo.2024.100097
Kasperowski, D., Peterson. J., Hagen, N. (2024). ‘Coming Apart at the Swedish Higher Environmental Court: Associating and Disassociating Citizen Observations with Legal Obligations.’ Science, Technology, and Human Values.
Peterson, J. (2024). “Ethical Challenges in Mariculture: Adopting a Feminist Blue Humanities Approach.” Journal for Agricultural and Environmental Ethics. 37, 3. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10806-024-09921-5.
“Seeking an Algal Perspective: Exploring ‘Harmful’ Algae through an Interview with Nodularia spumigena.” Being Algae: Transformations in Water Plant Studies. Brill Critical Plant Studies. Eds. Yogi Hale Hendlin, Sergio Mugnai, Natalia Derossi, and Johanna Weggelaar. Leiden: Brill. (8 Feb. 2024).
“Introduction.” Co-authored with P. Olson and N. D. Lekker. In Death’s Meaning and Materiality Beyond the Human. Eds. Jesse D. Peterson, Philip Olson and Natashe Demos Lekker. Bristol: Bristol University Press. (2024). pp. 1-9.
“Can the Baltic Sea Die? An Environmental Imaginary of a Dying Sea.” In Death’s Meaning and Materiality Beyond the Human. Eds. Jesse D. Peterson, Philip Olson and Natashe Demos Lekker. Bristol: Bristol University Press. (2024). pp. 54-67.
“Beyond the Norms.” Co-authored with P. Olson and N. D. Lekker. In Death’s Meaning and Materiality Beyond the Human. Eds. Jesse D. Peterson, Philip Olson and Natashe Demos Lekker. Bristol: Bristol University Press. (2024). pp. 180-186.
"Inequality persists in a large citizen science programme despite increased participation through ICT innovations." Co-authored with Jönsson, M., Kasperowski, D., Coulson, S.J. et al. Ambio (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-023-01917-1.
“Bringing Together Species Observations: A Case Story of Sweden's Biodiversity Informatics Infrastructures." Co-authored with Dick Kasperowski and René van der Wal. Minerva: A Review of Science Learning and Policy. 3 April 2023. pp. 265-289.
“Storying Toxic Time-Scape ‘Trajectories’: Intersections among algal toxins and more-than-human bodies.” Toxic Time-Scapes: Examining Toxicity Across Time and Space. Eds. Simone M. Müller and May-Brith Ohman Nielson. Athens: Ohio University Press. 22 December 2022.
“Inter/National Connections: Linking Nordic Animals to Biodiversity Observation Networks.” Routledge Handbook of the Digital Environmental Humanities. Co-authored with Dick Kasperowski and René van der Wal. Eds. Charles Travis, Luke Bergmann, Arlene Crampsie, Deborah Dixon, Steven Hartman, Robert Legg, and Francis Ludlow London: Routledge. 12 September 2022.
“The Metaphor of Ocean ‘Health’ is Problematic; ‘The Ocean We Want’ is a Better Term.” Co-authored with Susanna Lidström and Tirza Meyer. Frontiers in Marine Science, 9. 15 February 2022. pp. 1-4. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.818229
“Doing Environmental Humanities: Inter/Transdisciplinary Research through an Underwater 360° Video Poem.” Green Letters, Mar. 2019, pp. 1–15.
Global Environments: A 360º Visual Journey. Rachel Carson Center Virtual Exhibitions, Co-authored with Norum, R., Antonova, A.S., Jones, J.C., Lagier, C., Lakhani, V., Oomen, J., Sébire, A. and Yoho, S.E., 2019. p. 36.
“Are dead zones dead? Environmental collapse in popular media about eutrophication.” The Discourses of Environmental Collapse: Imagining the end. Ed. Alison Vogelaar, Brack Hale, and Alexandra Peat. April 20, 2018.
“Crossing the Line: Death at the Equator.” GeoHumanities, Fall 2016.
“Naturalizing Data as Environment.” Reality Harvester: Nature after Data after Nature. Eds. By Amy Boulton, Lisa Trogen Devgun, Jacob Broms Engblom, and Benjamin Gerdes. Göteborg: Skogen. 2022. 44-49.
“A Rushing Mighty Wind.” Breathing Stories: Utah Voices for Clean Air. Salt Lake City: Torrey House Press. 2018.
“I Saw You Running Home.” Capitalism, Nature, Socialism. 2018.
Three Strains from adamsongs. Terrain.org. Summer. 2014.
Peterson, Jesse. “Call for Chapters for Edited Book – Death and Dying at the Margins: Material-Discursive Perspectives on Death and Dying (tentative title)” More-Than-Human Conversations. The Posthumanities Hub. 2020.
Peterson, Jesse and Natashe Demos-Lekker. “Report: Dying at the Margins Workshop.” Transformative Humanities. KTH. Dec. 2019.
Peterson, Jesse; Allen, Irma; Valisena, Daniele; and Gough, Anne. “What if…? Redefining research impact from an environmental humanities perspective.” Transformative Humanities. KTH. Sep. 2018.
Peterson, Jesse. “Can Water Die?: Report on PhD mid-Seminar on Algae Blooms and the Baltic Sea.”WaterBlog@KTH: Reflect, Rethink, Refill. May 2018
Peterson, Jesse and Boutet, Jean-Sebastien. “The Interruptor: A (late) review of Learning to Die in the Anthropocene.” Transformative Humanities. Division of History of Science, Technology, and Environment. 2018.
Peterson, Jesse. “Undisciplined Discipline Writing Workshop.” ENHANCE Blog. 2017.
Peterson, Jesse and Zahara, Alex. "Anthropocene Adjustments: Discarding the Technosphere." Discard Studies Blog. 26 May 2016.