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Invited Speaker Seminar Series

Spring 2022

Wednesdays from 12:30-1:30 p.m. over Zoom

Join on Zoom at https://uidaho.zoom.us/j/97172348716

 

Jan. 26 — Arjan Meddens, Washington State University

"Specifying remote sensing data product characteristics for forest and fuel management applications"

View the presentation

Passcode: Wv%d5OZ+

 

Feb. 9 — Katie Wollstein, Oregon State University

"Integrating range and fire management in southeastern Oregon"

View the presentation

Passcode: 7@7eTT$B

 

Feb. 23 — Troy Magney, University of California, Davis

"Do plants glow, can we see it from space, and why would we care?"

View the presentation

Passcode: *8t8Mm8%

 

March 9 — Amanda Stasiewicz, San Jose State University

"The rise of renegades: Resident experiences during the California 2020 fire siege"

View the presentation

Passcode: CpZk=YU9 

 

March 30 — Jyoti Jennewein, ARS, Greenbelt, MD

"From the field to space: Remote sensing technologies for mapping winter cover crops"

View the presentation

Passcode: 7#ad2r5k

 

April 13 — Spencer Plumb, National Forest Foundation

"Conservation Finance: Exploring New Funding Models for the Restoration of Public Lands"

View the presentation

Passcode: .6byt7#+

 

April 27 — Micah Russell, Western Colorado University

"Building toward climate resilience: restoring and researching Colorado headwaters through interdisciplinary collaboration"

View the presentation

Passcode: K02*i1.Z

Previous Seminars

NRS Graduate Seminar, Dept. of Natural Resources and Society

Natural and Social Migrations

  • 1/28/2021: Ruth Oliver
    Postdoctoral Researcher, Yale University
    "A bird's eye view of migration: What new technologies can teach us about old questions in avian phenology"
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar
  • 2/11/2021: Karl Bursa
    Senior Administrator Floodplain Management, Monroe County Florida
    “The Florida Keys”
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar
  • 2/25/2021: Elizabeth Marino - Dennis Davis
    Associate Professor of Anthropology, Oregon State University - Inupiat Photographer
    "Pulling At the Thread: Why Climate Change Driven Relocation is Such a Hard Problem to Solve"
  • 3/11/2021: Carlos Munoz Brenes
    Chief Social Scientist, Conservation International
    “The Role of Social Science in Making the World a Better Place"
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar
  • 4/1/2021: Robert Lewis
    Deputy Chief Officer (Administration), Cabinet Office, Caymen Islands Government
    “Migration, Climate Change or any significant challenge: some best practices toward being effective”
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar

  • 4/15/2021: Paul Montesano
    Lead Research Scientist, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
    "Boreal forest migration: heterogeneity, variability, & uncertainty of forest change in the high northern latitudes"
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar

  • 4/29/2021: Linda Amaral-Zettler
    Research Leader, Department of Marine Microbiology and Biogeochemistry: NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
    “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Plastisphere”
    View the Presentation
    Passcode: NRS-501-Seminar

Contemporary Issues in Natural Resources and Society: Social-Ecological Systems and Socio-Environmental Synthesis

Natural and cultural resource managers and decision-makers need to integrate social, ecological and traditional forms of knowledge in order to understand and address complex environmental challenges. We hear this message coming from stakeholders who employ our NRS graduates. We are designing curricula, research, and outreach in a social-ecological context because we think this will help prepare our students to be successful professionals. The goals for this seminar are to provide our faculty, staff, and students opportunities to interact with and learn from diverse scholars whose work can inform and shape our social-ecological understanding, and to offer our students opportunities to develop and practice effective science communication. The specific focus of this year’s seminar will be the importance of connections between the Inland and Pacific Northwest and the Ocean.

Invited speakers for the fall include:

September 4th: Eric Jessup, Associate Research Professor
School of Economic Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman WA
“PNW Transportation and Economic Connectivity”
View the Presentation

September 18th: Kenneth Wallen, Assistant Professor
College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow ID
“The Four Fixes: A Behavior Design Framework for Social-Ecological Systems”
View the Presentation

October 16th: Richard Maganck, International Environmental Consultant and retired Rector (President) of United Nations Institute for Post Graduate Water Education
UNESCO-IHE, Delft, The Netherlands
“Governed by waters: the life and times of an international civil servant”
View the Presentation

October 30th: Captain Shaun McAndrew , Professor of Naval Science and University of Idaho NROTC Commanding Officer
“The Changing Maritime Security in the Arctic, a Naval perspective”
View the Presentation

November 13th: Anastasia Telesetsky, Professor of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Faculty
College of Law, University of Idaho, Moscow ID
“Our Plastic Oceans”
View the Presentation

November 20th: Jaap Vos, Professor and Bioregional Planning and Community Design (BIOP) Program Head
College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow ID
“Intruders and extractors of the American West: How Californians, Texans, Canadians and Amazon are reshaping Idaho”
View the Presentation

December 11th: Mary Engels, Assistant Professor
College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow ID
"Oh the places you will go: Preliminary thoughts on the fate of plastic debris from inland waters"

** Additional invited speakers will be added to the schedule as they are confirmed

Fall 2018 NRS 501: Social-Ecological Systems

Seminar Context and Goal
Natural and cultural resource managers and decision-makers need to integrate social and ecological knowledge in order to understand and address complex environmental challenges. This message is clear in both theory and practice: we hear it coming from stakeholders who employ our NRS graduates, and through our development of new knowledge within the scientific community. NRS is designing curricula, research and outreach in a social-ecological context because this will help prepare our students to be successful professionals in our ever changing world. The goal of this seminar is to provide for our faculty, staff and students opportunities to host, interact with and learn from a diversity of leading professionals and scholars who design and implement their work in a social-ecological framework. 

September 6, 2018
Dr. Leona Svancara, Spatial Ecologist
Idaho Department of Fish and Game and University of Idaho, Moscow, ID
"Managing Idaho's Wildlife in a Social-Ecological System Framework? Insights, Challenges, and Opportunities"

September 20, 2018
Dr. Kristal Jones, Social Science Researcher
Center for Large Landscape Conservation and SESYNC, Bozeman, MT
"Empirical and epistemological challenges in interdisciplinary socio-environmental systems research."

October 4, 2018
Dr. Emma Norman, Professor and Chair
Native Environmental Science Department, NW Indian College, Bellingham, WA
“Starting from Where you Stand: Place-based pedagogy and Indigenous Knowledge Systems in STEM education and research”

October 18, 2018
Dr. Todd Brinkman, Professor and Director
Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK
"Exploring the impact of climate change on access to ecosystems services in Alaska"

November 1, 2018
Dr. Tom Koontz, Professor
School of Interdisciplinary Arts-Sciences, University of Washington-Tacoma
"Policy Research for Social-Ecological Systems: Institutions and Governance"

November 15, 2018
Dr. Toddi Steelman, Stanback Dean and Professor
Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, NC
“U.S. Wildfire Policy as Socio-ecological Problem”

November 29, 2018
Mr. Chip Corsi, Regional Supervisor Northern Region
Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Coeur d’Alene, ID
"Righteously Right or Effectively Right – a Case for Pragmatism and Public Ownership in the Management and Conservation of Natural Resources"

Contact Us

Natural Resources and Society

Physical Address:
975 W. 6th Street
Moscow, Idaho

Mailing Address:
875 Perimeter Drive MS 1139
Moscow, ID 83844-1139

Phone: 208-885-7911

Fax: 208-885-4674

Email: nrs@uidaho.edu

Web: College of Natural Resources

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