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12/2 In Conversation: The Role of the States in Preserving Democracy
In Conversation: The Role of the States in Preserving Democracy
Monday, December 2nd, 20245:00 PM - 7:00 PM William F. Starr HallA reception will precede the discussion. Light refreshments will be served.
If you require a reasonable accommodation for a disability, please contact the Law School at 860-570-5079 or via email at law.studentservices@uconn.edu at least two weeks in advance.RSVP here!
Contact Information:lawevents@uconn.edu
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12/4 Wednesday Workshops: Hana Maruyama “The Land Is Fenced: The Role of Japanese American Incarcerated Labor in the Formation of Settler Property on Indigenous Lands”
Wednesday Workshops: Hana Maruyama “The Land Is Fenced: The Role of Japanese American Incarcerated Labor in the Formation of Settler Property on Indigenous Lands”
Wednesday, December 4th, 20241:15 PM - 2:15 PM Walter Childs Wood HallThe History Department hosts Wednesday Workshops several times throughout the semester to further scholarly dialogue among graduate students, faculty, and visiting scholars. In the form of a brownbag lunch, the speaker presents their research-in-progress and then engages in a Q&A with the audience.
Contact Information:Please contact Assistant Professor Kaveh Yazdani at kaveh.yazdani@uconn.edu if you are interested in presenting at or attending a Wednesday Workshop.
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12/5 Ph.D. Defense of Dissertation-M. Aynal Haque
Ph.D. Defense of Dissertation-M. Aynal Haque
Thursday, December 5th, 202412:00 PM - 1:30 PMTitle: Mitigating Climate Change: Cross-National Variation in Policy Ambitions
Committee Members:
Zehra Arat, Chairperson
Oksan Bayulgen, Co-Chair
Lyle Scruggs
Shareen Hertel
Jeremy Pressman
Thomas Hayes
Contact Information: More
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12/5 GSCU Colloquium - Hanson Nyantakyi-Frimpong
GSCU Colloquium - Hanson Nyantakyi-Frimpong
Thursday, December 5th, 20243:30 PM - Austin BuildingFrom hatchet to seed: Grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology for transforming tree-based climate action
Hanson Nyantakyi-Frimpong
Department of Geography & the Environment, University of Denver
Abstract
Since its inception over four decades ago, a major shortcoming of political ecology has been its excessive focus on criticisms while offering few direct solutions. Political ecology research that aims at incisive criticism is often called a ‘hatchet,’ while work focusing directly on nurturing possibilities for social change is called ‘seed work.’ Thus far, how to do political ecology seed work has received relatively scant attention in the geographic literature. In this talk, I will highlight one potential way of doing seed work using a grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology approach. Drawing empirical material from a shade-grown cocoa and carbon offset project in West Africa, I will demonstrate the power and transformative nature of seed work. I will further reflect on the difficulty of doing political ecology seed work and argue that although it can be time-consuming and stressful, it is needed now more than ever to support ongoing struggles against social and environmental injustices. In addition to grassroots-led action research, this talk will highlight other approaches through which political ecologists have engaged in seed work and from which the field’s newcomers and current practitioners can learn from.
Contact Information:Thelma Abu
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thelma.abu@uconn.edu
For POLS faculty and staff – Please use the event communications form to let POLS know about events you have planned. We will use this information to promote your event, specifically to POLS undergraduate majors.