Colloquium Speaker Series: Amy Frazier
Zoom (Online)Professor Amy Frazier of the University of California, Santa Barbara, will present “A Geographic Approach for Co-designing and Implementing ‘30×30’ Conservation Goals.”
Professor Amy Frazier of the University of California, Santa Barbara, will present “A Geographic Approach for Co-designing and Implementing ‘30×30’ Conservation Goals.”
In this talk, Clark University professor Elizabeth Blake (English) focuses on T. S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” and H. D.’s “Priapus” to discuss the way modernist poets disrupt lyric traditions by setting intertextuality and phenomenological referentiality in tension in order to explore queer experience.
Agriculture in many African countries is undergoing rapid change to meet steadily growing food demand. This talk will present an approach designed to overcome these technical challenges.
Explore how benefit-sharing policies, public participation, and indigeneity influence natural resource conflicts in the Ecuadorian Amazon with Danilo Borja, a researcher and practitioner who tackles energy justice, clean energy, Indigenous Peoples’ rights, and environmental remediation.
Binghamton University Professor Jason Moore will present “Climate Revolts, Climate Crises, or, Why Climate Doomism is Bad History, Terrible Geography, and Even Worse Politics.”
Timur Hammond of Syracuse University will present “The Transmitted Past: Toward a Rethinking of Geography, Temporality, and Community.”
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 […]
In celebration of International Open Access Week, join us for a panel discussion on the impacts of open access and how it affects scholarship at Clark.
Come check out geography courses and our faculty members’ research.
Students in the M.S./GIS program will share their research and internship work.
Join the Graduate School of Geography in celebrating GIS Proclamation Day.
Think you know your world capitals and landmarks? Celebrate International Education Week and GIS and Practicing Geography Week with a fun, quiz-style competition.
Come study at a small research university with a strong liberal arts core.
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