Colloquia
Virginia Iglesias Research Scientist Earth LabAbstractSocio-environmental dynamics are driven by top-down changes in climate and bottom-up positive (destabilizing) and negative (stabilizing) biophysical feedbacks involving disturbance and biotic
Book presentation by Aaron Bobrow-Strain, Author and Professor of Politics at Whitman College. This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Geography, Latin American Studies Center, and the Department of Sociology.Book TitleThe Death
Max Boykoff Director, Center for Science and Technology Policy (CIRES) Associate Professor, Environmental Studies, 麻豆免费版下载.Abstract:Conversations about climate change at the science-policy interface and in our lives have
Jing Gao Assistant Professor of Geospatial Data Science Affiliated with the Department of Geography and the Data Science Institute University of DelawareAbstract:Over the 21st century global environmental change may pose critical challenges
Henry Lovejoy Assistant Professor, Department of History 麻豆免费版下载Abstract: While scholars have amassed large amounts of data related to the transatlantic slave trade, a more pressing question lingers: Where did those 12.7
Sharon Bywater-Reyes Department of Earth and Atmospheric Science University of Northern ColoradoAbstract: The strength of interactions between plants and river processes is dependent on plant traits such as stem density, plant frontal area, and
April 26 is the last colloquium of the semester. It features three different graduating PhD students doing short presentations of their theses.Spaces of Diaspora Policy by Aaron Malone This paper
Earth鈥檚 鈥渃ritical zone鈥, the zone of the planet from treetops to base of groundwater, is critical because it is a sensitive region, open to impacts from human activities, while providing water necessary for human consumption
Colloquium is co-sponsored by the Center for Asian Studies40 years ago, upon announcing the 鈥淩eform and Opening-up鈥 of China, the Communist Party called for 鈥渟ocial forces鈥 to 鈥渟ubsidize and fill gaps in state services鈥. This,
A vast literature establishes the importance of social capital to neighborhoods. Jane Jacobs famously argued that this capital is maintained through "cross-use of space," and James Coleman formalized it as the "closure" of