Colloquia
This panel of scholars will put Brazil’s recent period of forest fires into a larger historic, political perspective. Moderated by Joe Bryan, Associate Professor, GeographyPanelistsPeter Newton Assistant Professor, Environmental Studies
Abstract: Satellites provide the most consistent and reliable measurements of snow and ice globally with estimates of snow-covered area, grain size, and concentration of light-absorbing particles creating global potential to improve existing
Four Geography graduate students will present a preview of the talks they will give at the American Association of Geographers (AAG) meeting:Kate Hale:Streamflow sensitivity to climate warming: A shift from snowfall to rainfall and changing surface
John O’Loughlin Professor of Geography and Fellow, Institute of Behavioral Science Chair, CU-Boulder Standing Committee on Research MisconductGreater attention to issues of research misconduct has been evident in universities, funding agencies and
Presentation by Kenneth Bauer, Anthropology, Dartmouth CollegeDrawing upon fieldwork in western Nepal, the Tibet Autonomous Region, and the eastern Tibetan Plateau as well as historical and contemporary maps, I will argue that there is a
Anthropology Colloquium SeriesCo-Sponsored by the Department of Geography and the Department of History Presentation by Dr. Lee Dugatkin Hale 230, Nov 8, 4 PMAbstract:For the last six decades a dedicated team of researchers in Siberia has been
Eric Perramond Environmental Science and Southwest Studies Professor, Colorado CollegeAbstractIn the American West, water adjudication lawsuits are adversarial, expensive, and lengthy. Unsettled Waters is the first detailed study of
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, ³Ô¹ÏÍø of Colorado Boulder.Abstract:Conversations about climate change at the science-policy interface and in our lives have