Presentation Schedule
Saturday, May 10, 9:30am-4:30 PM
| 9:30-9:50pm: | Welcome and introductory remarks |
| 9:50-10:20am: | Leigh Raymond, "Is Commodifying Nature Sustainable?" |
| 10:20-10:30am: | Q&A |
| 10:30-10:45am: | Angela Gugliotta, "Pittsburgh: 'Child of Nature and Necessity'" |
| 10:45-10:55am: | Q&A |
| 10:55-11:20am: | Coffee break |
| 11:20-11:50am: | Sarah Fleisher Trainor, "Climate Change Impacts and Response in Alaska" |
| 11:50am-noon: | Q&A |
| Noon-12:30pm: | Ron Meyers, "Assessment of U.S. Middle School Student Environmental Literacy" |
| 12:30-12:40pm: | Q&A |
| 12:40-2:30pm: | Lunch |
| 2:30-2:50pm: | Breena Holland, "Can Sustainable Development Be Just?" |
| 2:50-3:00pm: | Q&A |
| 3:00-3:30pm: | Murat Arsel, "The End of Sustainable Development: Capitalism, Economic Growth, and Global Inequality" |
| 3:30-3:40pm: | Q&A |
| 3:40-4:00pm: | Concluding remarks |
The Chicago area, despite its urban character, is home to significant biodiversity. Situated at the intersection of the northern boreal forest, prairie, savanna, and dune environments, Chicago is a crossroads for more than just our own species. Here the great eastern tallgrass prairies met oak-hickory woodlands as well as wetlands, savannas, swamps, and other associations, forming a complex mosaic of environments. The long history of human habitation in this region has significantly transformed local environments, but not all pre-contact environments have vanished and local efforts at restoration and conservation have begun to make a significant difference in the extent and health of indigenous plants and animals. Our logo is derived from the Hickory (Carya); local oak-hickory forests are dominated by Shagbark Hickory (C. ovata) and Bitternut Hickory (C. cordiformis).

