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March 26- Apr 1

April 2-8

April 9-15

Events at Smith

Health and STEM Professions Lunchbag: First-Generation-in-College Faculty Members:
March 26, 2021
a panel discussion about what it means to pave the way to higher education for one's family. With panelists Professors Denise Lello, Randi Garcia, Will Williams and Peter de Villiers
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Virtual
12:15 pm to 1:00 pm

Crochet a Coral Reef! Be a part of the Radical Fiber: Threads Connecting Art and Science project!
March 26, 2021
Join us and crochet a coral figure that will become part of the Tang Teaching Museum’s major community art project Radical Fiber: Threads Connecting Art and Science. These virtual sessions, led by various campus groups, can be joined via the zoom link below (click on "More"). Don’t know how to crochet? We will have experienced crocheters on every call who can teach you in a break out room. Need crochet materials? Email us at capenannex@ smith.edu and we will get you set up!
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Virtual
2:00 pm

Sigma Xi Lunch Talk: How LiDAR is Revolutionizing The Way We Read the History of Landscapes
March 30, 2021
Faculty, emeriti, staff, and students are welcome to attend the talk by Smith's very own Bob Newton, Professor Emeritus of Geosciences. Bob Newton is a groundwater geologist, hydrologist and geomorphologist interested in groundwater contamination issues, chemical cycling in groundwater systems, interactions of groundwater and wetlands, and use of high­-resolution light detection and ranging (LIDAR) data for imaging geomorphic features and processes. Zoom info is linked below.
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12:30 pm to 1:30 pm

The 12th Annual AEMES Research Symposium
March 30, 2021
We've got eleven dynamic 4 minute presentations by AEMES Scholars and Junior and Senior McKinley Fellows on their work on topics that range from Effects of Color on Prey Capture in Sarracenia Pitcher Plants to Resilient Carbon Neutrality: Battery Backup Power on Smith Campus Here, in no particular order, are the awesome presenters Wanbin Chen**Giovanna Sabini-Leite**Sara Schritter**Nubia Udoh**Lucy Gould**Quinton Celuzza**Sally Robson**Jailene Gonzalez****Nelida Ayala**Ashley Rivas**Nyla Conaway, Vivian Almaraz, Dorithy Barnieh** Zoom link below.
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4:30 pm to 5:45 pm

Designing Collaborative Change: a Q&A Event with the Team from Creative Reaction Lab
March 31, 2021
How might young people work collaboratively to create powerful change? Join a Q&A event with members of the team at Creative Reaction Lab (CRXLAB), an organization whose mission is to educate, train, and challenge Black and Latino youth to become leaders in designing healthy and racially equitable communities. The panel includes Antionette Carroll, President and CEO; Tiana Glass, Program Coordinator; Mariapaz Gomez, Community Engagement Associate; and Hilary Sedovic, Learning and Education Director. Watch Carroll’s TED Talk on “Designing for a More Equitable World,” and then join us to learn about how CRXLAB empowers youth to work together to lead change. Click below to RSVP for the event!
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7:00 pm

Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore
March 31, 2021
Author Elizabeth Rush, will speak on her latest book Rising: Dispatching from the New American Shore, a Pulitzer finalist, which lyrically documents the transformation of shorelines around the United States as a result of climate change and rising seas. Rush teaches creative nonfiction at Brown University. She appears in conjunction with the Kahn Institute yearlong project Imagining Climate Change: From Slow Violence to Fast Hope. Click the link below to register:
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Online
7:00 pm

Birding with CEEDS
April 1, 2021
Learn to identify some of our local birds on this casual walk around Paradise Pond and along the Mill River with Dano Weisbord. No previous birding experience necessary! Please wear comfortable walking shoes and be ready for spring mud. Space limited and sign up is required. To sign up email ceeds@ smith.edu.
Meet on Chapin Lawn
8:30 am to 10:00 am

Alum Chat with Clara Fang, '05, Student Engagement Director with the Citizens' Climate Lobby
April 1, 2021
ES&P hosts an Ask Me Anything (AMA) Series with some of its alums. Fair game are questions about finding a job, grad school, work/life balance, Smith courses that made a difference, career paths, lessons learned, and much more. What burning questions do YOU have? These events are intended to provide a space for students to chat with alums about their current career and their journey after Smith. Our first guest, Clara Fang '05, is a PhD candidate in environmental studies at Antioch University New England who works to empower young people and people of color in the climate movement. As Student Engagement Director for Citizens’ Climate Lobby (CCL), Clara oversees programs that have helped thousands of young people learn advocacy skills, organize climate action in their communities, and lobby their elected officials for fair and effective climate policies. Email jbenkley @smith.edu for a link to join us.
Virtual
5:00 pm to 6:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Hop Reuse Hub Presents: Plastic Bag Reuse and How to Reduce
March 26, 2021
Register below to join the Johns Hopkins Homewood Recycling Office for a fun, two-part Lunch & Learn series this spring. We will teach you how to use plastic bags to make a reusable produce bag! This is a two-part event. During the first event, from noon to 1 p.m. on March 26, we will teach you how to use disposable plastic bags to make plarn, aka plastic yarn. During the second lunchtime event, from noon to 1 p.m., on April 16, we will teach you how to use the plarn to make a reusable produce net bag (see attachment for example). To participate in the event, all you will need is approximately four to six disposable bags and a pair of scissors. During both events we will also chat about the importance of reduction and reuse as well as the Baltimore City plastic bag ban and extended producer responsibility (EPR). You must register to get the Zoom link. Contact recycling@jhu.edu with questions. We look forward to seeing you!
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Zoom
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

Kinstillatory Mappings and Speculative Conversatins to Otherwise Spaces of Care:
March 26, 2021
Emily Johnson in conversation with Karyn Recollet. Emily Johnson is an artist who makes body-based work. A Bessie Award-winning choreographer, Guggenheim Fellow and recipient of the Doris Duke Artist Award, she is based in New York City. Originally from Alaska, Emily is of Yup’ik descent, and since 1998 has created work that considers the experience of sensing and seeing performance. Her dances function as portals and installations, engaging audiences within and through space, time, and environment—interacting with a place's architecture, peoples, history and role in community. Emily is trying to make a world where performance is part of life; where performance is an integral connection to each other, our environment, our stories, our past, present and future. For more information and to register, please visit the link below:
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Virtual
4:30 pm

2nd Annual Virginia Environmental Justice Summit (VEJS)
March 27, 2021
VEJS is a student-run conference designed to engage other students from throughout the nation in multidisciplinary conversations around issues of environmental justice. The goal of the event is to learn about environmental justice issues impacting our communities, with a specific focus on the intersections of food, water, and energy. In the summit students will: learn basic definitions of environmental justice, actively engage in discussions about food and water sovereignty, energy transition, environmental racism, and environmental policy in Virginia, with a specific focus on uplifting Indigenous communities and communities of color, Gain skills for coalition building, lobbying, petitioning, letter writing, and other advocacy action items, Meet other activists and learn about their unique experiences and perspectives within the environmental justice movement View agenda, register, and learn more at VirginiaEnvJustice.org (linked below)
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Virtual
9:00 am to 4:00 pm

Unpacking Food Trauma: A Workshop on Addressing Oppressive Structures Within the US Foodscape
March 30, 2021
The industrialization of food production and perpetually increasing corporate greed, especially in colonized regions of the world, has poisoned the relationship between many communities and food. Determined by race, class, and gender, food trauma takes root in the scarcity of adequate nutrition, the removal of access to culturally relevant ingredients, food apartheid, climate crises, and a weightloss focused restrictive diet culture. Join us in a conversation with Dr. Breeze Harper to discuss the ways in which we can engage in food justice through a trauma informed and intersectional lens and how to make our movements as inclusive as possible. Link to join below.
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4:00 pm to 5:30 pm

Restoring Florida’s Corals Reefs: From Colonies to Coastlines
March 30, 2021
Healthy coral reef ecosystems underpin Florida’s tourism economy, support vital commercial and recreational fisheries, and help protect our shorelines from the devastating impacts of storm surge and coastal flooding. But these iconic ecosystems have undergone dramatic declines in recent years. Associate Professor Lirman and Professor Baker from the Department of Marine Biology and Ecology at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science are working together to restore these precious local ecosystems and the valuable services they provide using a combination of new and established restoration approaches aimed to not only recover depleted reefs but also increase the climate resilience of restored coral populations. Part of the 2021 Sea Secrets lecture series at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. Register using the link below:
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Virtual via Zoom
6:30 pm

Our World: Indigenous Communities in Solidarity for Environmental Justice
April 1, 2021
In efforts to build international solidarity, this panel will bring attention to the common thread of colonialism causing environmental justice issues in each panelist’s country as well as uplift their work supporting their communities. We will learn from the panelist’s climate activism and adaptation, traditional ecological knowledge, and Iived experience fighting for environmental justice. Panelists will discuss their work as well as their thoughts on how global solidarity is important and necessary. Register with link below
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2:00 pm

Addressing Challenges of Diversity, Representation, Bias, and Discrimination in Planning Practice
April 1, 2021
Across the U.S., there are institutional debates regarding how best to support diversity within urban planning curricula, among our students and faculty members, and in our workplaces. Dr. April Jackson, Assistant Professor, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Florida State University, will discuss findings from a collaboration between the American Planning Association (APA) and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning – Planners of Color Interest Group (ACSP-POCIG). Dr. Jackson's research focuses on the ways planners can promote racial equity and inclusion in mixed-income communities, institutions, and workplaces by advocating for equitable, inclusive, and just communities. Prior to her faculty position she worked as an architect and urban designer at Destefano Partners and AECOM in Chicago, IL and Irvine, CA on public housing redevelopment projects, neighborhood revitalization plans, and new urbanist communities in the U.S., China, and the Middle East. Part of the UMass Zube Lecture Series. Use the link below to join the meeting; Zoom meeting ID: 981 5129 0161
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Virtual
4:00 pm

Lecture: Black Landscapes Matter
April 1, 2021
The UMass College of Humanities and Fine Arts welcomes acclaimed landscape designer and public artist Walter Hood as the inaugural speaker in the Dean's Distinguished Lecture Series. His lecture "Black Landscapes Matter" discusses landscape architects, planning professionals, and scholars to probe how race, memory, and meaning intersect in the American landscape. The question "Do black landscapes matter?" cuts to the core of American history. From the plantations of slavery to contemporary segregated cities, from freedman villages to northern migrations for freedom, the nation’s landscape displays the fragments of diverse, often oppressive origins. Black landscapes matter because they tell the truth. Register with link below:
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Virtual
4:00 pm

Events at Smith

Beyond Big Data: Communicating Climate Change Through Indigenous Voices and Art
April 8, 2021
An online conversation with indigenous scientist/artist James Temte and special guest Alaska Native Ahtna Elder Wilson Justin. James Temte, a member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe who leads National Science Foundation's Navigating the New Arctic Community Extension Office, will share a conversation with Ahtna elder Wilson Justin on the topic of Indigenous knowledge, connection to the land and the role of art in communicating the realities of climate change beyond the Arctic. This public conversation is presented as part of the Kahn Institute yearlong project Imagining Climate Change: From Slow Violence to Fast Hope.
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7:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Native Americans and the National Consciousness: Virtual Reading and Conversation with Joy Harjo
April 5, 2021
The Harvard University Native American Program and the Harvard Art Museums present a reading and conversation with Joy Harjo, the 23rd poet laureate of the United States. Harjo is an internationally renowned performer and writer, who is a member of the Mvskoke Nation and belongs to Oce Vpofv (Hickory Ground). The author of nine books of poetry, several plays and children’s books, and a memoir ("Crazy Brave"), she has received many honors, including the Ruth Lilly Prize for Lifetime Achievement from the Poetry Foundation, the Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets, a PEN USA Literary Award, the Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund Writers’ Award, a Rasmuson U.S. Artists Fellowship, two NEA fellowships, and a Guggenheim fellowship. Harjo is chancellor of the Academy of American Poets and a founding board member of the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation. She is executive editor of the anthology "When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry," released in 2020. She lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where she is a Tulsa Artist Fellow. Register below:
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Virtual
6:00 pm

Science at Conservation’s Frontiers
April 6, 2021
How is conservation conducted at the edges of our scientific knowledge? What does conservation research look like when an entire taxon of species is removed or in habitats where species are designated threatened as quickly as they are discovered? Attempting to answer these questions are Dr. Haldre Rogers, Project Director of the Ecology of Bird Loss Project and Assistant Professor at Iowa State University, and Dr. Brett Scheffers, Assistant Professor at the University of Florida. Join us to learn more about their critical research and conservation journeys. You won’t want to miss this! Sponsored by the Society for Conservation Biology North America. Registration is required, please register at the link below:
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Virtual
3:00 pm to 4:00 pm

Disrupting Settler Colonialism: #landback and Other Calls to Action
April 7, 2021
What does #landback look like, in practice? How can non-Native settlers actively participate in disrupting settler colonialism? We hear from people involved in Indigenous resistance about their work, what #landback means to them, and what possibilities the future holds if there is an authentic collective effort to disrupt the persisting violence of settler colonialist practices. Registration link is below:
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6:00 pm to 8:00 pm

Student Climate Conference: Legislating the Climate Crisis: A Reflection
April 8, 2021
on Climate Action During Biden's First 100 Days in Office and Our Path Forward. As we approach both Biden's first 100 days in office and Earth Day 2021, speakers from the Sunrise Movement, the Biden administration, and Los Angeles Times climate journalist, Rosanna Xia, will discuss climate change, climate justice, and our immediate path forward under the Biden administration. In attending this event, you will join the action-oriented conversation on the climate crisis and Biden’s legislative agenda with members of educational communities across Harvard and the surrounding Boston-area, including MIT, Tufts, Northeastern, and Boston University. By creating a dialogue between students, policy-makers, practitioners, academics, innovators, and activists, this conference seeks to evaluate existing systems, inspire agents of change, and start conversations around the multidisciplinary solutions we urgently need.
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5:30 pm

Climate Solutions Dialogue
April 8, 2021
Brandeis is the MA host for the Solve Climate by 2030 project, an international series of dialogues about climate solutions. This year’s theme is what we need to achieve a green economic recovery and a just transition in Massachusetts, and our goal is to Make Climate A Class in every classroom in MA. Climate change touches every discipline, in K-8, high school and university. The teachers guides are grounded in climate solutions and justice in the transition. The amazing panelist include: Jennie C. Stephens, PhD, is the Director of the School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs and the Dean’s Professor of Sustainability Science & Policy at Northeastern University and panelist Tibor Toth is an Adjunct Professor at Brandeis University’s International Business School, and is currently the Managing Director of Investments at the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center. Learn more and register with link below.
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6:00 pm to 7:00 pm

Events at Smith

Ask Me Anything Alum Chat with Alexandra Davis, '18
April 12, 2021
The second guest in ES&P's AMA series is with Alexandra Davis ’18. Her work as a Sustainability Consultant and Material Carbon Specialist at Thornton Tomasetti focuses on performing whole building life cycle assessments to identify the embodied carbon intensity of building materials and optimize design efficiencies towards low carbon material selection with an emphasis on product circularity and adaptive reuse. Join us to get answers to questions on your mind about life after Smith. Fair game are questions about finding a job, grad school, work/life balance, Smith courses that made a difference, career paths, lessons learned, and much more. What burning questions do YOU have? Email jbenkley @smith.edu for a link to join.
5:00 pm

Yestermorrow Design/Build School Semester Info Session
April 13, 2021
Interested in designing and building an architecturally innovative, high-performance shelter in a semester? Join the Design Thinking Initiative Wednesday, April 13 4:50-5:30 pm on Zoom to learn more about spending a semester thinking with your hands at Yestermorrow Design/Build School in Waitsfield, Vermont. We will be joined by Yestermorrow faculty and Smithies who can speak to their experience in the program.To join use the zoom link below.
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4:50 pm to 5:30 pm

A Conversation With Artist Cannupa Hanska Luger
April 13, 2021
Cannupa Hanska Luger is a multi-disciplinary artist of Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European descent. Through monumental installations that incorporate ceramics, video, sound, fiber, steel and repurposed materials, Luger interweaves performance and political action to communicate stories about 21st century Indigeneity. Using social collaboration and in response to timely and site-specific issues, Luger produces multi-pronged projects which oftentimes presents a call to action, provoking diverse publics to engage with Indigenous peoples and values apart from the lens of colonial social structuring. Luger lectures and participates in residencies and projects around the globe and his work is collected internationally. He is a 2021 United States Artist Fellow, a 2020 Creative Capital Award recipient, a 2019 Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant recipient and the recipient of the 2018 Museum of Arts and Design’s inaugural Burke Prize. The event is sponsored by the art department and CEEDS as part of this spring's Drawing Social Justice class. Register to join at the link below:
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Virtual
7:00 pm

Events Off Campus

Business of Saving the Planet: A Call to Environmental Leadership
April 12, 2021
A round table discussion with Dr. Jane Goodall, Lisa Jackson (VP of Environmental Initiatives at Apple), Ryan Gellert (CEO Patagonia), and Scott Atkinson ( Managing Partner & Co-Head of Heidrick & Struggles’ Global Sustainability Office). Sponsored by the graduate program in Environmental Sciences and Policy at Johns Hopkins. Full information and registration for the free virtual event can be found at the link below:
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Virtual
12:00 pm

Earth Month Teach-In: Leveraging Research to Inform Calls to Action
April 13, 2021
University of Pittsburgh invites you to join on April 13th for a virtual presentation and happy hour as part of the Green Speakeasy Series hosted by Pitt’s Mascaro Center for Sustainable Innovation. In this Earth Month event, we welcome seven influential women from our campus and community to discuss how we can leverage research to inform calls to action. The 7 amazing speakers include Melissa Bilec MCSI (Host and Moderator), Jessica Burke (Public Health), Emily Elliot (Geology & Environmental Science), Carla Ng ( Engineering), Mary Ohmer (Social Work), Kay Shimizu (Political Science), and Shannah Tarp-Gilliam (Homewood Children’s Village). Each of the presenters will bring their unique skill set in the areas of environment, equality, and economics to the conversation about discovering connections and building opportunities toward a healthier future. To register click below.
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4:00 pm to 5:30 pm

Why Are There Colors In The Ocean?
April 13, 2021
With Derya Akkaynak, Ph.D. Mechanical Engineer and Oceanographer, Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute. The color of ocean water provides us tremendous insights regarding the properties of the particles in it. Using satellites that sense ocean color, we are able to monitor worldwide concentration of phytoplankton—tiny organisms in the water column that produce food for everything else in the ocean to eat. That ocean water has color, however, is precisely what is holding us back from unveiling the colors of everything else, such as the colors of the ocean flora, fauna, and the unique habitats that host them. What would we learn if we could see the true colors of everything in the ocean? Part of the 2021 Sea Secrets lecture series at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. Register below:
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Virtual via Zoom
6:30 pm

Intergenerational Conversation: Art, Climate, and Action Panel
April 14, 2021
Susan Theberge, Citizen’s Action Network / Extinction Rebellion Red Brigade; Carolina Aragón, Landscape Architecture UMass, Climate Visualization Artist; and Nicole Young, Performance Poet and Philanthropy Professional, and others will share how they use their art to address the climate crisis. Co-moderated by Dee Boyle-Clapp, Director of Arts Extension Service, and Hind Mari, Women of Color Leadership Network, UMass Amherst. Artists will share how their work impacts and is impacted by the effects of climate change. Following the panel, participants will join in facilitated breakout groups by art form to discuss how to use one’s art and work intergenerationally to inspire action. Register below:
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12:00 pm