Events at Smith Candidate Talk: Mechanisms behind photosynthesis and how they will be affected by climate change February 4, 2011 Please join us over the lunch hour for a talk with Plant Physiological Ecology candidate Lindsey Tuominen, PhD. Lunch will be provided but please bring your own beverage. McConnell Foyer 12:10 pm to 1:00 pm
Events Off Campus Lecture: Gullah-Land and Community: A locative media website for heritage tourism February 3, 2011 Elizabeth Brabec, professor and department head of the UMASS Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning department, will speak on the rapidly evolving world of locative media software. Her presentaiton will explore the opportunities and pitfalls of using the these technologies to understand the interaction of culture and the landscape. This is part of the Ervin Zube Lecture Series.
UMASS- Procopio Room, 105 Hills North 4:00 pm
Lecture: Epistemic Citizenship and the Patenting of Hoodia as Life February 3, 2011 A talk with Laura A. Foster, J.D., Ph.D. Candidate Department of Women's Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.
Campus Center 917, UMass 5:00 pm
Lecture: Water Supply Protection Through Watershed Management: The New York City and Metro Boston S February 4, 2011 The Department of Geosciences at UMASS Amherst presents a talk by Dr. Rutherford Platt, Professor Emeritus, Department of Geosciences.
UMASS Amherst- Hasbrouck 124 12:20 pm
Lecture: Race and the Science of Love: February 7, 2011 Reframing the Problem of Compulsory Monogamy for Feminism. A talk by
Angela Willey, (Ph. D. Women's Studies, Emory University). Currently
LGBT Studies Post-Doctoral Fellow in Women and Gender Studies, Carleton College.
Campus Center 917, UMass 5:00 pm
Lecture: Climate Change Avatars: Virtual Bodies in the Fight for the Future February 8, 2011 Eban Goodstein, a national leader in climate change education will be speaking on the science, economics and politics of global warming. Focusing on his experiences at the December 2009 Copenhagen Climate Conference, his lecture will include information about local and global impacts of climate change and energy legislation pending before Congress. More... Mount Holyoke College's Hooker Auditorium 7:30 pm
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Events at Smith Information Session: Interested in the oceans and ocean policy? February 9, 2011 Come to learn about this year's National Council for Science and the Environment: Our Changing Oceans Conference in Washington D.C! Student attendees will briefly discuss current developments in the Deep Water Horizon Oil Spill, the opening of the Arctic, and other policy issues presented at the conference. They will also discuss how you can attend next year's conference on the environment and global security.
Campus Center 103/104 12:00 pm
Webinar: Beyond Apocalypse: Centering justice in climate education and activism February 9, 2011 In this talk Betsy Hartmann and Katie McKay Bryson of the Population and Development Program (PopDev) at Hampshire College will describe their work to bridge divides between educators and activists as well as between different social movements to build a stronger constituency for justice-centered climate policies in the United States. PopDev’s climate-related activities include college courses, high school curricular materials, scholarly and popular publications, and workshops and convenings that bring students, activists and policymakers together. PopDev has a critical perspective on apocalyptic population and security narratives about climate change that place blame on poor people and immigrants from the Global South. Instead, our organization promotes a positive vision of change grounded in reproductive and environmental justice, as well as in the belief that only a fundamentally diverse climate movement can achieve effective and equitable climate policy in the U.S.
Presented by the New England Faculty Colloquium: Climate Change, Policy, and Energy Solutions.
Webinar in the Center for the Environment, Ecological Design, and Sustainability (CEEDS), garden-level, Wright Hall 2:30 pm
Lecture: Mount Tom Power Plant: How Does the Valley Get Its Energy? February 9, 2011 Dick Stein and Peter Vickery will talk about the Mount Tom Power Plant's future, in particular how the plant is looking into changing over to natural gas, and what that would mean for the planet and our community.
Part of Mountain Justice Month sponsored by Smith's Students for Social Justice and Institutional Change (SSJIC) and the Western Mass Coalition for Justice in Appalachia.
Graham Hall 4:30 pm
The Green Zone- The Environmental Costs of Militarism February 9, 2011 Join us to hear from Barry Sanders, author author of "The Green Zone: The Environmental Costs of Militarism" and professor emeritus of history at Pitzer College. In "The Green Zone," Sanders examines the environmental impact of U.S. military interventions overseas. In a period of scrutiny surrounding the social and economic impacts of the defense policies of the U.S. government,Sanders explores a completely different aspect of the situation and positions military activity as the single-greatest contributor to the worldwide environmental crisis, looking at everything from fuel emissions to radioactive waste to defoliation campaigns.
Sponsored by the APJ War & Environment Committee and the Smith College Environmental Science and Policy Program. Neilson Library Browsing Room, Smith College 7:30 pm
Lecture: From Theory to Models: Human-Environment Analysis in Massachusetts and Beyond February 14, 2011 Please join the Environmental Science and Policy Program for a lecture with postdoctoral candidate Stephen McCauley, Ph.D., Clark University. A pizza lunch will be provided, but please bring your own beverages. McConnell 103 12:10 pm to 1:10 pm
Events Off Campus Lecture: Beyond Apocalypse: Centering justice in climate education and activism February 9, 2011 In this talk Betsy Hartmann and Katie McKay Bryson of the Population and Development Program (PopDev) at Hampshire College will describe their work to bridge divides between educators and activists as well as between different social movements to build a stronger constituency for justice-centered climate policies in the United States. PopDev’s climate-related activities include college courses, high school curricular materials, scholarly and popular publications, and workshops and convenings that bring students, activists and policymakers together. PopDev has a critical perspective on apocalyptic population and security narratives about climate change that place blame on poor people and immigrants from the Global South. Instead, our organization promotes a positive vision of change grounded in reproductive and environmental justice, as well as in the belief that only a fundamentally diverse climate movement can achieve effective and equitable climate policy in the U.S.
Presented by the New England Faculty Colloquium: Climate Change, Policy, and Energy Solutions.
Hampshire College- ELab II Room 115
Lecture: The Once and Future New England Mill Town: A Literary Interpretation February 10, 2011 John Mullin, Professor of Regional Planning and Director of the Center for Economic Development will be giving a talk as part of UMASS Amherst's Ervin Zube Lecture Series, which seeks enrich the local academic community in areas of landscape architecture and planning. UMASS- Procopio Room, 105 Hills North. 4:00 pm
Lecture: The Genomics of Human Difference February 10, 2011 A talk with Catherine Bliss, (Ph. D. Sociology, New School for Social Research). Currently postdoctoral fellow in Africana Studies and Science and Technology Studies, Brown University
Campus Center 917, UMass 5:00 pm
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Student Interest: Green Team Meeting February 17, 2011 Green Team is the action arm of the Smith College Committee on Sustainability. We are a coalition of faculty, staff, and students dedicated to implementing sustainable initiatives at Smith. If you want to be part of Smith’s green story, we welcome you to join us for lunch every other Thursday!
More... Campus Center 102 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm
Lecture- February 17, 2011 "How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming” with Naomi Oreskes, an important historian of science whose work has helped distinguish propaganda presented to the public as legitimate science from the true scientific consensus. Professor of History and Science Studies at the University of California, San Diego, and Adjunct Professor of Geography at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Oreskes' research focuses on consensus and dissent in science. Weinstien Auditorium, Wright Hall, Smith College 7:30 pm
Events at Smith Lecture: Get rich and save the planet? Biodiversity, economic prosperity, and conservation policy February 16, 2011 Please join the Environmental Science and Policy Program for a lecture with postdoctoral candidate Julianne Mills, Ph.D., Davidson College. A pizza lunch will be provided, but please bring your own beverages. McConnell 103 12:10 pm to 1:10 pm
Film Screening and Talk: Black Diamonds: Mountain Top Removal and the Fight for Coal Field Justice February 16, 2011 Catherine Pancake, Director/Producer of the film Black Diamonds: Mountain Top Removal and the Fight for Coal Field Justice is coming to screen her film and host a post screening discussion. This film deals with issues of the ethics of mountain top removal, mtr 101, and environmental justice.
Part of Mountain Justice Month sponsored by Smith's Students for Social Justice and Institutional Change (SSJIC) and the Western Mass Coalition for Justice in Appalachia.
More... Graham Hall 4:30 pm to 7:00 pm
Lecture: Land-cover change and carbon sequestration in coffee agroforests February 21, 2011 and tropical forests in Guatemala.
Please join the Environmental Science and Policy Program for a lecture with postdoctoral candidate Mikaela Schmitt-Harsh, Ph.D., Indiana University-Bloomington. A pizza lunch will be provided, but please bring your own beverages. McConnell 103 12:10 pm to 1:10 pm
Events Off Campus Lecture: Sunburnt Cities: Urban Planning and Design for Shrinkage in the American Sunbelt February 17, 2011 Justin Hollander, Associate Professor at Tufts University will be speaking as part of UMASS Amherst's Ervin Zube Lecture Series, which exists to enrich the the local academic community by presenting lectures on topics in landscape architecture and planning. UMASS- Procopio Room, 105 Hills North 4:00 pm
Author Talk: Rick Bass February 17, 2011 The Miller Worley Center for the Environment, Environmental Studies Program, and English Department of Mount Holyoke College, and the Odyssey Bookshop present a talk with novelist Rick Bass. Mr. Bass is a noted nature writer and environmental activist whose stories convey a deep reverence for nature, providing reasoned benefits of preserving wilderness areas. His memoir, Why I Came West (2009), was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award.
Mount Holyoke- Hooker Auditorium, Class Laboratory 7:30 pm
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