Sustainability and Social Justice
Events
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Clark University, Higgins Lounge, Dana Commons – 2nd Floor 36 Maywood Street, Worcester, MA, United States -
Cynthia Enloe’s Final Clark Lecture: ‘Feminist Curiosity is for These Dark Times’
FeaturedTilton HallProfessor Cynthia Enloe will bring her series of regularly scheduled fall lectures at Clark to a close with a talk on the importance of having feminist-informed skills in gender analysis with everything: war and peace, climate and equality, governance.
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Protecting Historic Lands in Philippines
jefferson 222 950 Main Street, Worcester, United States +1 moreHomonhon Island, renowned for its rich biodiversity and historical significance, is facing escalating environmental degradation from large-scale mining operations that began expanding in the 1980s.
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A Journey Around the World
The Grind, Higgins University Center 950 Main Street, Worcester, United StatesTour the glabe in one room: Get your passport, explore embassy booths, stamp as you go, and win prizes.
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Climate Finance and the Green Climate Fund
CMACD, Room 310 7 Hawthorne Street, Worcester, MA, United StatesThe Clark community is invited to join Professor Cynthia Caron’s Climate Change Adaptation Planning and Implementation course for a virtual talk by Laura Hammett, a consultant in climate adaptation and urban planning.
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Transnational Knowledge Production and Academic Identity
In displacement settings, immediate survival often takes precedence—but what role does intellectual identity play in helping scholars rebuild their careers and sense of belonging? Join the Integration and Belonging Hub for the first session of our new webinar series, Scholars in Exile – Rethinking Academic Humanitarianism. Sponsored by the Integration and Belonging Hub at Clark University Speakers […]
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Spirituality and the Ethics of Conservation: The Collapse of Marine Fisheries in West Africa
Clark University, Higgins Lounge, Dana Commons – 2nd Floor 36 Maywood Street, Worcester, MA, United StatesPresented byEmmanuel Akyeampong, PhDEllen Gurney Professor of History and of African and African American Studies, Harvard UniversityMinister for Worship and Formation, Harvard University Memorial Church In the 1960s, economist and anthropologist Polly Hill dubbed Ghanaians “Pan-African fisherman.” Ghanaian fishermen could be found all along the West African coast from the Gambia to the Niger Delta. […]
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At Risk Scholars and the Academic Job Market
In displacement settings, immediate survival often takes precedence—but what role does intellectual identity play in helping scholars rebuild their careers and sense of belonging? Join the Integration and Belonging Hub for the second session of our new webinar series, Scholars in Exile – Rethinking Academic Humanitarianism. Sponsored by the Integration and Belonging Hub at Clark University Speakers […]
