Environmental Studies ENVS

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Rebecca Gould, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Studies Chris Klyza, Stafford Professor of Public Policy, Political Science and Environmental Studies Marc Lapin, Associate in Science Instruction in Environmental Studies FlashBack FlashForward: Environmental Studies 1965 and 50 years on

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Lebanon’s Shouf Biosphere Reserve Transition Zone: Sport Hunters and a Protected Area Robert Greeley, Visiting Instructor in Arabic, Middlebury College Protected areas have undergone a powerful and sustained social critique, however, very little of this it addresses biosphere reserves and only a small fraction addresses the zoning practices of biosphere reserves. This talk is based on months of interviews and participant observation with biosphere personnel, police, politicians, Shouf residents and hunters in the transition zone of the Shouf Biosphere reserve.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Forecasting global water stress: successes and limitations Matt Landis, Research Scientist, ISciences, LLC Water stress is increasingly recognized as a central emerging challenge of the 21st century. Early warning of extreme water deficits and surpluses are valuable across sectors of society, ranging from food production to electricity generation. In this seminar, I’ll describe models and the underlying data used to forecast water stress globally over timescales ranging from months to decades, with a focus on what such data and models can and cannot tell us.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Environmental Studies Core Panel Discussion Looking Back a Half Century: “1966….the year of the new conservation”—LB Johnson, 2/23/66 Mez Baker-Medárd, Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies; Marc Lapin, Associate in Science Instruction in Environmental Studies; Kathryn Morse, John C. Elder Professor of Environmental Studies and Professor of History; Nick Muller, Associate Professor of Economics, Middlebury College

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELED. American Leadership in the Global Climate Movement Brian Deese ’00, Senior Advisor to the President “What Comes After Paris?” Just a day before the Paris Agreement opens for signature and ratification, Brian Deese, Senior Advisor to President Obama, will discuss what comes next for the world’s most ambitious climate agreement.
Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
“We Conserve What We Love”: Stories About the Conservation of Bread Loaf Katherine Michels ‘14.5, Environmental Philanthropy Associate at the High Meadows Fund In June 2015, Middlebury College and the Vermont Land Trust, with the support of alumnus Louis Bacon ‘79, signed a conservation easement which forever protects 2,100 acres of land around the Bread Loaf campus. Katie spoke with people from Middlebury College, the Vermont Land Trust, the Nature Conservancy of Vermont, Ripton, and Louis Bacon’s representatives.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Poet Ross Gay will discuss the way our relationship with the earth might also be the site of the radical imagination. Ross Gay, Associate Professor of Creative Writing at Indiana University, is visiting campus as the Spring 2016 Bread Loaf Orion Resident, a collaboration between Franklin Environmental Center, the ES Program and Bread Loaf Orion Environmental Writers’ Conference. Ross was recently chosen as a finalist for the 2016 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award for his 2015 poetry collection Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Energy Company of the Future Mary Powell, Mary Powell - President & CEO, Green Mountain Power Green Mountain Power has a vision to use energy as a force for good, improving lives and transforming communities and is focused on a new way of doing business to meet the needs of customers with integrated energy services that help people use less energy and save money, while continuing to generate clean, cost-effective and reliable power in Vermont.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Shift in Perspective: Observing Food Systems Jon Turner, Owner-Wild Roots Farm Vermont in Bristol, VT and President, Farmer Veteran Coalition of Vermont In this presentation, we will discuss the current food systems and their ecological impact as well as examine alternative methods that produce a more diverse yield and are influenced heavily on what needs can be met by the natural systems already in place. Topics for focus include agro-forestry practices, permaculture design and community interaction.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public

Howard E. Woodin ES Colloquium Series

Sponsored by:
Environmental Studies
Shedding Light on the Working Forest: Curiosity, Connection, Creativity Kathleen Kolb, painter and Verandah Porche, poet Painter Kathleen Kolb and poet Verandah Porche will discuss the collaboration which culminated in the traveling exhibition currently at the Vermont Folklife Center. While we humans rely on the forest and those who harvest it, the service that it provides for us remains largely invisible and not widely understood.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Free
Open to the Public