2004-2005 Workshops
| October 7 | Kathleen Lowrey (Center for International and Comparative Studies, Northwestern University) "Natural Rents, Cultural Monopolies, and New Economic Strategies among Traditional and Indigenous Peoples" |
| October 21 | Theodore Steck (Chair, Environmental Studies Program) "Can Greed Solve the Environmental Crisis?" Readings:
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| November 4 | Hilda Koster (Ph.D. candidate, Divinity School) "Ecological Hope and Creation in Juergen Moltmann's Theology of Creation" |
| November 18 | Christopher Downey Buck (Ph.D. candidate, Political Science) "Adorno and Radical Environmental Thought" |
| December 2 | Rafi Youatt (Ph.D. candidate, Political Science) "Nonhuman Agency and the Epistemologies of Environmental Science" |
| January 13 | Jessica Jerome (St. John's College, Santa Fe) "A History of Health and Medicine in Northeastern Brazil" |
| February 3 | Dave Aftandilian (Ph.D. candidate, Anthropology) "What Did Owls Mean to the Illinois Mississippians?" |
| February 17 | Murat Arsel (Lecturer and Research Associate, Environmental Studies Program) "Energy Politics and Policy in Turkey" |
| March 3 | name and title removed per request |
| Monday, April 18 |
Alec Brownlow (Geography & Urban Studies and Environmental Studies Program, Temple University) "Legacies of Fragmentation: Nature in Entrepreneurial Philadelphia" |
Workshop Archive
New Graduate Teaching Opportunities for 2008-2009
The Program on the Global Environment has a number of opportunities for advanced graduate students specializing in environmental topics, regardless of discipline.
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).

