INWOOD studies industrialisation through the most important pre-industrial resource: wood. Scholarship on industrialisation has concentrated on the introduction and spread of new energy sources and materials, paying scant attention to the pre-existing resources. However, available data shows that wood was fundamental in the key sectors driving industrialisation, while its consumption increased during this process. INWOOD analyses the role that wood played during industrialisation and the impact of industrialisation on the actors and sectors most involved in wood use, with a focus on Europe between 1870 and 1914. The project pioneers an interdisciplinary and multi-scale approach to analyse the links between the following interrelated issues: Economic dynamics on a macro scale: the changes in wood consumption in relation to industrial demands, but also the spread of alternative energy sources and materials; the transformation triggered by industrial technology in the geography of wood flows and in the logistics of the wood supply chain. Social dynamics on a micro scale: the impact of changes in the wood economy on the populations living close to the woodlands, in both the areas that were central before industrialisation and those that became central because of it; the choices made by actors involved in the exploitation of woodlands when faced with these developments. Ecological dynamics on multiple scales: the evolution of the European forest cover in terms of reforestation in some regions and deforestation in others; the main qualitative changes in the forest landscape in terms of tree species composition, age and density. INWOOD integrates sources and analytical methods to change the way scholars understand industrialisation and to provide the historical context for present-day debate about the role of forests in climate change mitigation and biodiversity preservation.
We are pleased to share a new publication that contributes to the historical investigation of forest-related economies in Europe — a key focus of the INWOOD project. Claudio Lorenzini and…
9 September 2025: Panel “Timber floatations in Europe: between continuity and discontinuity” organized by Claudio Lorenzini and Katia Occhi. 10 September 2025: Panel “Coping with the comparison: sources, methods, models…
Panel organized by Giacomo Bonan with a paper by Cristiano La Lumia entitled “Regulating International Wood Trade: Timber Tariffs in Imperial Germany (1870s-1910s)”, Uppsala University, 20 August 2025.