Geography Colloquium Series: Dr. Timur Hammond
Grace Conference Room, Higgins University CenterTimur Hammond of Syracuse University will present “The Transmitted Past: Toward a Rethinking of Geography, Temporality, and Community.”
Timur Hammond of Syracuse University will present “The Transmitted Past: Toward a Rethinking of Geography, Temporality, and Community.”
His research focuses on the effects of climate, disturbances, and land use on mountain forest ecosystems in the U.S. and in Europe. Important recent research themes include: 1) the causes […]
Associate Professor and Interim Director in the School of Geography, Development and Environment at the University of Arizona Illegality and the transformation of low-wage labor regimes in the context of […]
His research group is interested in multiple aspects of ecology including: organic matter dynamics, ecosystem metabolism, food webs, disturbance, nutrient dynamics, invasive species, and tropical conservation. Our current focus projects […]
The Economics Society, a student-led organization that fosters a community for students interested in the study and application of economics, will host the first social event for the academic year […]
Date: October 16, 2025, 12 – 1:30 pm Room: JC118 Speaker: Balázs Zélity (Wesleyan University) Title: Demographics and International Capital Flows: An Empirical Assessment Abstract: This paper empirically investigates whether shifts in […]
Senior Director, Certification at Verra REDD+ and the Voluntary Carbon Market Deforestation currently contributes 12 to 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and addressing it is critical to mitigating climate […]
Dive into the story of sheep ranching in the American West — how land management works with the textile industry to reduce emissions, preserve healthy ecosystems, and create the clothes we wear.
Dr. Teferi Abate Adem Research Anthropologist at Human Relations Area Files Yale University
Discover the enlightening research and pioneering projects led by faculty in the Department of Sustainability and Social Justice.
Brazil’s Cerrado, the world’s most biodiverse savanna, is being rapidly transformed by agriculture and global markets. Gillian Galford of the University of Vermont will show how deforestation often precedes cropland development.
Come study at a small research university with a strong liberal arts core.
Still curious? Request more information.