Dr. Kelly H Dunning "Implementing the Convention On Biodiversity in megadiverse countries: public policy and coral reef conservation in Southeast Asia"
Native American activist Winona LaDuke will deliver the 32nd Annual Salem Peace Lecture On November 10, 2021 at 6:30 via zoom. The topic will be Indigenous Strategies to Address Climate Change.
This event is organized by the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies (CLLAS), Native American and Indigenous Studies, Anthropology, Black Studies, the Global Justice Initiative, and the Common Reading program of the University of Oregon.
Each year, faculty, staff, students, and community members come together to informally talk about transportation. We call this Bean Bag Conversations we're Having About Transportation (BBCHAT).
Using the nodes as way to organize, the Environment Initiative aims to support collaborations and work that aligns with the Guiding Principles. The goal of the workshops is to convene interested parties to brainstorm potential projects, partners, and opportunities. Please RSVP.
Sustainability Open Houses bring together staff, faculty, and students to share their work furthering sustainability at University of Oregon. These quarterly meetings foster collaboration between faculty and staff, build community, and support campus as a living lab.
The Imagining Futures series seeks to reframe some of today’s pivotal social issues in order to conceptualize a more just and sustainable future for all. Christina Rosan is Associate Professor of Geography and Urban Studies at Temple University. Rosan's forthcoming book Reimagining Sustainable CitiesStrategies for Designing Greener, Healthier, More Equitable Communities (co-authored with Stephen M. Wheeler) will be published in December 2021.
Given by Professor Stacy Leeds, the theme of the lecture series is the examination of native leadership and vision for environmental stewardship in the 21st century.
Presentation by Sara Jensen Carr on Hawaii's ahupua'a, traditional land divisions in Hawai'i that typically run from the mountains to the outer edges of offshore reefs and encompassing rivers, forest, farmland, and ocean.
Using the nodes as way to organize, the Environment Initiative aims to support collaborations and work that aligns with the Guiding Principles. The goal of the workshops is to convene interested parties to brainstorm potential projects, partners, and opportunities. Please RSVP.
Beyond the Spotted Owl: How Timber Workers and Environmentalists Once Worked Together (And Can Again) with Steven Beda, Assistant Professor, Dept. of History
Each year, faculty, staff, students, and community members come together to informally talk about transportation. We call this Bean Bag Conversations we're Having About Transportation (BBCHAT).