Geography Colloquium: Laurence C. Smith, Brown University
This talk will explore some of the many ways in which humans have used rivers over time — and how we continue to do so today.
This talk will explore some of the many ways in which humans have used rivers over time — and how we continue to do so today.
Professor Ursula K. Heise, UCLA Novelists, journalists, film directors and artists have created fictional and nonfictional stories about anthropogenic climate change for the last fifty years. The majority of […]
Join us on March 29 for a conversation with Dr. Lisa Schipper, IPCC Coordinating Lead Author on Climate Change Adaptation. Dr. Schipper is a Senior Professor of Development Geography at […]
Climate change adaptation conversation
Movie screening and discussion
A New Earth Conversation welcomes guest speakers Alex Eaves and Derek “Deek” Diedricksen, who will screen their film, “The Box Truck FIlm: Building a Reuseful Home” (2022), share their experience, and answer questions about building a “reuseful” home — a box truck turned into a house made from 100 percent recycled materials.
In a forthcoming book, Dr. Sasser examines young people and climate emotions, including grief and love.
Join the Graduate School of Geography to celebrate both the school’s 100th anniversary and the impact our scholars have made on the world.
The principle of free, prior, and informed consent is critical to ensuring that Indigenous communities have a say in how mining or other large-scale infrastructure projects moves forward in their territories. Scott Sellwood of Oxfam will discuss that organization’s research into the policies of companies engaged in the exploration and production of five in-demand minerals.
Clark University School of Management is holding its 6th Annual SOM Analytics Poster Competition on April 28. Graduate students from a variety of degree programs in the School of Management […]
The Integration and Belonging Hub Webinar Series presents Sandra Grudic, who will ponder the messiness of belonging, drawing upon her refugee — and non-refugee — experiences.