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November 11-17

November 18-24

November 25- Dec 1

Events at Smith

How to Take Action & Stay Hopeful in an Age of Climate Crisis:
November 12, 2020
A Conversation with International Smith Alums. Nearly every day brings news of devastating environmental challenges - from increasingly violent storms to plastics in our oceans to the production and unequal distribution of toxic wastes. In a world stretched thin for resources under threat of global climate change and the pandemic health crisis, how can we stay engaged, motivated and hopeful to enact real change? Use the link below to register and join us for a conversation with four alumni living in Africa and Europe who are working in the Climate/Sustainability/Environmental Protection fields. They will discuss their work and share specific actions they are taking to keep motivated and enact change in these challenging times. The conversation will be moderated by Professor Leslie King, Chair of Smith's Environmental Science and Policy Program, with time for questions.
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Virtual via Zoom
12:30 pm to 1:30 pm

Pacific Eco-Poetry. Online Reading by Craig Santos Perez
November 12, 2020
Craig Santos Perez, an indigenous Pacific Islander from Guam, is the author of five collections of poetry, most recently Habitat Threshold. He will share his poetry, focused on climate change, environmental justice, human-animal relations, and the anthropocene. This reading is in conjunction with the Kahn Institute 2020-21 yearlong project Imagining Climate Change: From Slow Violence to Fast Hope. Open to the public.
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Virtual via Zoom
5:00 pm

The Activists Post-election Playbook
November 12, 2020
with Kerene Tayloe, Director of Legislative Affairs for WeACT for Environmental Justice and Raquel Ortega '11, NoCAL ACLU Organizer. Register using the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
7:00 pm

NOAA summer internship presentations
November 13, 2020
Join us to hear from three Smithies who spent their summer in virtual internships with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and find out how you might intern with NOAA in summer 2021! Today's presentations include Ciara Chen, '21: Status of Caribbean Corals Listed under the Endangered Species Act; Dominique Kelly, '22: Why do some dolphins and whales form mixed-species associations? An unresolved puzzle in community ecology; and Phoebe Lease, '21: Communicating the Science and Technology Missions of Exploration. Use your Smith email to join us at the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
12:30 pm

Restoring a Cranberry Bog: Context, Science, Practice
November 16, 2020
Join Alex Hackman (Restoration Ecologist, Cranberry Bog Program Manager, Division of Ecological Restoration, Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game) in this ENX 100 lecture series discussion on the Cranberry Bog Restoration project in Massachusetts. Learn the context, science, and practice behind this unique project!
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Virtual via zoom
3:15 pm to 4:30 pm

I-Collective: A Roundtable with Indigenous Chefs
November 16, 2020
On the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the mayflower, this crew of Indigenous chefs and activists are hoping to bring awareness to the results of colonization in the New England region and the original tribes. “Indigenous foods”, “traditional foods”, and “food sovereignty” are terms born from colonization and hundreds of years of genocide, laws, wars, burned crops, and stolen land. In this roundtable discussion, I-Collective members including chefs, ethnobotanists, and foragers, will discuss the effects of colonization on Indigenous people since 1492 and the resiliency that food and nature brings to their culture, then and now. This event is free and open to the Smith community and the public however registration is required. Please register at the link!
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Virtual via zoom
4:45 pm to 6:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Thinking Ahead in a Reckless Age: Insights fromThe Optimist's Telescope
November 12, 2020
"If no one else seems to care about the future, why should I?" Many people today are disillusioned, even cynical, about what lies on the road ahead, and about humanity's capacity to thrive over the long term. In her 2019 book The Optimist's Telescope, Bina Venkataraman argues we can build a society of long-term thinkers, harnessing research, anecdotes, and case studies drawn from her background in public policy, climate change strategy, and journalism. In this talk, she will dispel myths about human shortsightedness and impart the lessons for thinking ahead even when the future is murkier than ever. Bina Venkataraman is an American journalist, author, and policy expert. She is currently the Editorial Page Editor of The Boston Globe and a fellow at New America. Since 2011, she has taught in the program on science, technology, and society at MIT. She is the author of The Optimist's Telescope: Thinking Ahead in a Reckless Age (Riverhead, 2019), named a top business book by The Financial Times and a best book of the year by Amazon, Science Friday, and National Public Radio. Bina formerly served as Senior Advisor for Climate Change Innovation in the Obama White House, where she forged partnerships among communities, companies, and government to prepare for climate disasters and to declassify data useful for global development. Register for the event using the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
12:00 pm

Finding the Past: Documenting and Restoring the Palace at Pernstejn, Czech Republic
November 12, 2020
with Ina Truxova, Landscape Architect, National Heritage Institute, Czech Republic.Part of the Zube Lecture Series hosted by Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning at UMass, Amherst. Join using the link below:
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Zoom
4:00 pm

Racism & Health Disparities
November 12, 2020
Dr. Evelynn Hammonds will talk about racial disparities in the age of coronavirus and how scientists developed categories of racial difference that shaped the practice of medicine, public health policy and the field of epidemiology. Dr.Hammonds, the Barbara Guttmann Rosenkrantz Professor of History of Science at Hampshire College, has written extensively about these topics. Her excellent book, Childhood’s Deadly Scourge: The Campaign to Control Diphtheria in New York City, 1880-1930, chronicles the first contentious struggle to apply bacteriology and immunology to the treatment of diphtheria. All are welcome, from A to Z: artists to zoologists! Join using the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
4:05 pm to 5:30 pm

Environmental Policy in Historical Perspective
November 12, 2020
Panel Discussion with Bill McKibben, Robert Pollin, Ashwin Ravikumar, Thea Riofrancos & Eve Vogel. We have only a few years left to make deep cuts to greenhouse gas emissions. This event will reflect on the implications of the U.S. election results for meeting this imperative. What are the prospects for a Green New Deal and other urgently needed measures, in the United States and beyond? How can the destructive power of the fossil fuel industries be neutralized? The panelists will analyze the current moment while also offering a historical perspective on environmental policy and movements.Part of the 2020-21 Feinberg Series, Planet on a Precipice: Histories and Futures of the Environmental Emergency presented by the UMass Amherst History Department. Use the link below to register or for more information:
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Virtual via Zoom, FaceBook or YouTube.
6:00 pm

Webinar: How to Get a Job in Sustainability Purpose-Driven Careers in Business, NGOs, and Government
November 12, 2020
The Covid recession has made finding work more challenging. But it has also opened new opportunities for driving social and environmental progress. Dr. Eban Goodstein, Director of Graduate Programs in Sustainability at Bard College, will outline mission-focused career strategies for both soon-to-be and recent college graduates, and for professionals looking to make a move. Goodstein will provide participants with a concrete job-search strategy, discuss what the current political climate means for careers in social and environmental sustainability, and also field questions in a live, interactive webinar. Register at the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
6:30 pm

Water Cooler Chat: Exploration of Modern Indigenous Knowledge and the Power of Indigenous Western S
November 13, 2020
Celebrate Native American Heritage month with James Rattling Leaf Sr, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, University of Colorado Boulder and Robert Newman, University of North Dakota from ESA’s Traditional Ecological Knowledge Section as we explore: What is Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK)? How does the power of indigenous knowledge contribute to Western science? What insights can TEK provide into the way we teach our students to connect with the world? Bring your favorite beverage and join us for an inspiring Water Cooler Chat. Register below:
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Virtual via Zoom
4:00 pm

Events at Smith

Massachusetts GIS Day 2020
Wednesday, November 18
Join us as we celebrate GIS across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts! GIS Day 2020 will include many activities that are fun and engaging such as the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap mapathon, 2020 ArcGIS StoryMaps competition, an undergraduate virtual poster contest, "Grad Slam!" lightning talks, and a keynote talk by Dr. Arzu Çöltekin. The event is free and open to all! Visit the event's site to learn more about the schedule and registration: https://sites.google.com/umass.edu/magisday2020.
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Virtual via Zoom
9:00 am to 8:00 pm

Environmental Science & Policy Study Abroad Information Session
November 18, 2020
Hear from fellow students about their experience in a Smith-approved study abroad program with an environment-related focus! Lisa Johnson, Assistant Dean for International Study will be there to provide additional information and answer questions about all of the programs available.
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Virtual via zoom
12:30 pm to 1:20 pm

Public Voice Across Media: Speaking Out Against Climate Change
November 19, 2020
There are a number of channels through which we can amplify our voices on issues that matter to us. Join the Wurtele Center for Leadership in a conversation with three individuals who are passionate about one issue - ending climate change - but who share that passion through different media. Panelists include public artist Eve Mosher, journalist Audrea Lim, and political science scholar Leah Stokes. This session is part of the Amplify initiative.
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Virtual via zoom
7:30 pm to 9:00 pm

Micro documentary screening: One Word Salwamem
November 23, 2020
Celebrate Native American Heritage Month! Join us to watch this film and then participate in a Q&A with co-director Michael “Pom” Preston of the Winnemem Wintu tribe of Mt. Shasta, California. Student members of Indigenous Smith Student Alliance (ISSA) will facilitate. 
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Virtual via Zoom
7:00 pm

Events Off Campus

History from Below: Extractivism, Geology, and Power
November 18, 2020
Panel Discussion with Angélica Maria Bernal, Nigel Clark, Gregory Cushman & Andrea Marston. Human exploitation of the underground has been central to the unfolding climate and ecological emergency. Inseparable from empire-building, colonialism, and the rise of capitalism, extractions from the earth have expanded dramatically since the early modern era. Across the world, there have been unpredictable transformations in climate, landscapes, ecologies, affecting the lives of humans and nonhumans alike. In all this, however, the underground is not simply passive matter; human actions, to put it differently, are not the only force feeding these transformations. What kinds of stories, still untold, might we tell about human entanglements with the physical earth, and about geological agency and history? How might such inquiries help us to better comprehend and confront our contemporary planetary predicament? Part of the 2020-21 Feinberg Series, Planet on a Precipice: Histories and Futures of the Environmental Emergency presented by the UMass Amherst History Department. Use the link below to register or for more information:
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Virtual via Zoom, FaceBook or YouTube.
4:00 pm

Racial and Climate Justice in 2020 and Beyond
November 21, 2020
This critical conversation on climate and racial justice will feature two leaders in the field: Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley for MA-07 and Autumn Peltier a Canadian-Youth Water Activist. The discussion will be moderated by Rosanna Xia, Pulitzer Finalist for Environmental Journalism at the Los Angeles Times. Presented by the Harvard Student Climate Conference. Zoom link will be provided closer to the event. Register at the link below!
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Virtual via zoom
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

Events at Smith

ES&P Lunchbag: Dissecting the Decision-Making Process of Green Infrastructure
November 30, 2020
with Fushcia Hoover (Purdue University). Email Joanne: jbenkley@ smith.edu for the link to join.
Virtual via Zoom
12:30 pm