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Sustainability Digest


The Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability provides this list to announce seminars, meetings, colloquiums, lectures, brown bags, announcements of interest, and job opportunities to the Institute community. If you have items you’d like to add please submit them to Cindy.Zisner@asu.edu before 5:00 p.m. Wednesday. This Digest is sent out on Friday morning. You may subscribe, unsubscribe, or change subscriber settings at http://lists.asu.edu/archives/giosasu.html on the menu on the right of the page at Subscribe or Unsubscribe. You can see archives of list messages at the same address.



NEW ITEMS

(Current items remain in the Digest until they happen so don’t forget to peruse the web listing in case you missed something in the previous week.)


Institute Events

1. Sustainability Series: Sustainable Manufacturing: A Three Decade Journey

2. Sustainability Series: Systematic Risk and Opportunity: Alternative Realities in Social and Ecological Systems

3. Global Futures Special Seminar: Can We Sustainably Feed the World in 2050? Yes We Can, But It Won't be Easy

4. Sustainability@ASU: Brown Bag: Writing Op-Eds

5. Sustainability Series: Cleaning It Up: Making America Beautiful Again


Other Events - On Campus

6. Life Sciences Café: Life Outside of the Lab: Career Options for Life Scientists

7. Life Sciences Ethics Program: Brains, Science and the Public Interest Movie Night – Awakenings

8. Dialogues in Complexity: Protecting Against Bad Actors: From Election Security to Immunology

9. ReACt at ASU Bio Security Workshop

10. School of Human Evolution and Social Change: Hydropolitics, Infrastructure, and the Affordances of Energy Sovereignties

11. Life Sciences Café: Understanding Social Behaviors in Microbial Populations

12. School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning Colloquium: Aquaterra - Geography's New Realm

13. 3rd Annual GRI Reporters' Summit: North America

14. Call for Abstracts: Urban Climate Research Center Annual Poster Competition


Other Events - Off Campus

15. A Sip of Science: To Catch a Cancer: When Viruses are the Culprit


News and Announcements

16. Meet sustainability student Hailey Campbell

17. Scientific pursuits inside monastery walls

18. Nobility for the environment

19. The ethics of conservation: Should we bring back extinct species?

20. Connecting students to hospice and palliative care as career options through real-world experience

21. Rob and Melani Walton strengthen their commitment to ASU

22. President's Award for Sustainability

23. 10 groups that will be key to combating climate change in 2019

24. ASU Social Embeddedness Report 2018

25. ASU and Phoenix issue new call for ventures to innovate for waste prevention and diversion

26. International Research Experience for Undergraduates: Philippine PIRE Project

27. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Science, Technology and Policy Program

28. Arizona Department of Water Resource Drought Program


Institute Jobs

29. Student, Research Aide, Central Arizona–Phoenix LTER


Other Jobs

30. Economist, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC

31. Water Conservation Specialist, City of Tempe, Tempe, AZ

32. Watershed Group Coordinator (part-time), Friends of the Rio de Flag, Flagstaff, AZ

33. Collegiate Assistant Professor, Environmental Informatics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA


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EVENTS

Institute Events


21st Annual CAP LTER All Scientists Meeting and Poster Symposium

(Friday, January 11, 2019) The Central Arizona–Phoenix Long-Term Ecological Research (CAP LTER) program invites you to join us for our 21st All Scientists Meeting and Poster Symposium. This is an opportunity for members of the CAP research community to network and discuss recent updates and research. The keynote speaker will be Professor Marc Johnson from the University of Toronto-Mississauga, who will give a presentation on animal adaptation and evolution in the urban environment. From 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. at rooms Synergy I and II, Skysong, 1301 N Scottsdale Rd, Scottsdale. More information and registration.


School of Sustainability Alumni - Community Garden Maintenance & Harvest

(Saturday, January 12, 2019) Interested in gardening? Want a way to contribute to your community? Interested in meeting fun, sustainability-oriented people? Then join us for the School of Sustainability Alumni Monthly Community Garden Harvest Day! Help us give back to the community of Tempe by putting in a couple hours of yard work at Escalante Community Garden. You do not need to be there the entire time. Fruits and vegetables harvested by the volunteers goes directly to the Tempe Community Action Agency Food Pantry. From 9:00-11:00 a.m. at Escalante Community Garden, 2150 E. Orange St, Tempe. More information and registration.


NEW!

Sustainability Series: Sustainable Manufacturing: A Three Decade Journey

(Monday, January 14, 2019) John Sutherland, Purdue University will present Sustainable Manufacturing: A Three Decade Journey from 12:00-1:15 p.m. in room 481, Wrigley Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

Sustainability Series: Systematic Risk and Opportunity: Alternative Realities in Social and Ecological Systems

(Tuesday, January 15, 2019) Simon Levin, Princeton University will present Systematic Risk and Opportunity: Alternative Realities in Social and Ecological Systems from 12:00-1:15 p.m. in room 481, Wrigley Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

Global Futures Special Seminar: Can We Sustainably Feed the World in 2050? Yes We Can, But It Won't be Easy

(Tuesday, January 15, 2019) Mark Bernstein, Proteus Environmental Technologies will present Can We Sustainably Feed the World in 2050? Yes We Can, But It Won't be Easy from 2:00-3:00 p.m. in room 240, ISTB 4, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


How the Humanities Can Save the Planet: Paradise Lost

(Wednesday, January 16, 2019) This first lecture in the series, How the Humanities Can Save the Planet, is the Annual Lecture of the ASU Environmental Humanities Initiative and part of Professor Bate’s Spring 2019 ASU residency in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability, with support from the Department of English and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Reception at 5:00 p.m.; lecture begins 5:30 p.m. in the Marston Exploration Theater, ISTB 4, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

Sustainability@ASU: Brown Bag: Writing Op-Eds

(Thursday, January 17, 2019) Mary Hoff, ASU Media Relations Journalism Fellow and Ensia editor-in-chief, will present Writing Op-Eds from 12:00-1:30 p.m. in room 323, Wrigley Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


Can Humans and Insects Thrive, Share and Save Earth?

(Thursday, January 17, 2019) Yoram Yerushalmi, Israel Center for the Expression of Beneficial Insects will present Can Humans and Insects Thrive, Share and Save Earth? From 3:00-4:15 p.m. in room 481, Wrigley Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


LightWorks®: Celebrating Success with Dropworks

(Thursday, January 17, 2019) Chris Perkins, Dropworks, Inc., will present Celebrating Success with Dropworks from 4:00-6:00 p.m. in the 3rd floor lobby, ISTB 4, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

Sustainability Series: Cleaning It Up: Making America Beautiful Again

(Friday, January 18, 2019) David Baron, Earthjustice, will present Cleaning It Up: Making America Beautiful Again from 3:30-4:45 p.m. in room 481, Wrigley Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


Last Chance! Early Bird Discount on Sustainability Certificate

(Thursday-Saturday, March 28-30, 2019) Earn an accelerated Professional Certificate in Sustainability Strategy the consistently top ranked W.P. Carey School of Business and the pioneering first-in-the-nation School of Sustainability. Instead of focusing on gloom-and-doom, this program will focus on the business opportunities that accompany sustainability challenges. Industry sustainability leader, Bruno Sardo, who is an instructional lead for ASU's Executive Master of Sustainability Leadership (EMSL) program will host the program along with leaders in business and sustainability. In addition to the professional certificate, you'll leave with: (1) hands-on sustainability tools that can be used at work to leverage the sustainability opportunity, (2) a professional cohort and sustainability network of peers and (3) experience with world renowned sustainability and business experts. Registration is now open. To be held at Arizona State University, Tempe campus. Don't miss the $700 off early bird discount-ends January 13, 2019! Questions? Contact sustainabilityskills@asu.edu. More information.



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Other Events

On Campus


NEW!

Life Sciences Café: Life Outside of the Lab: Career Options for Life Scientists

(Friday, January 11, 2019) Join us for a Life Sciences Café seminar, Life Outside of the Lab: Career Options for Life Scientists, presented by Mark Schwartz, COO of Theracaine and a member of the ASU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Biotechnology Advisory Board. From 1:00-2:30 p.m. in room 202, C-wing, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information.


NEW!

Life Sciences Ethics Program: Brains, Science and the Public Interest Movie Night – Awakenings

(Tuesday, January 15, 2019) Join us to see Awakenings featuring Robert De Niro and Robin Williams. This movie explores Dr. Malcolm Sayer’s efforts to treat catatonic individuals who survived an early twentieth century encephalitis lethargica epidemic with L-Dopa in 1969. Discussion following the film. In room B105 (Auditorium), Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe campus; doors open 5:00 p.m. RSVP is required.


NEW!

Dialogues in Complexity: Protecting Against Bad Actors: From Election Security to Immunology

(Thursday, January 16, 2019) J. Alex Haldeman, Computer Science and Engineering, University of Michigan and Andrea Graham, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University will present Protecting Against Bad Actors: From Election Security to Immunology from 3:00-5:30 p.m. in the Auditorium (B105), Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

ReACt at ASU Bio Security Workshop

(Friday, January 18, 2019) The Regional Academic Collaboration (ReACt) is an exciting initiative of Los Alamos National Laboratory to promote research collaborations and partnerships with selected universities in the western United States. These opportunities are highlighted in a series of workshops sponsored by ReACt to explore Los Alamos scientist/university faculty research joint research concepts and funding opportunities. These workshops also afford students an opportunity to explore career opportunities with the Los Alamos National Laboratory. All day workshop from 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. in Biodesign Auditorium and Biodesign C, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

School of Human Evolution and Social Change: Hydropolitics, Infrastructure, and the Affordances of Energy Sovereignties

(Friday, January 18, 2019) Christine Folch, Duke University will present Hydropolitics, Infrastructure, and the Affordances of Energy Sovereignties at 11:30 a.m. in room 254, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information.


NEW!

Life Sciences Café: Understanding Social Behaviors in Microbial Populations

(Friday, January 18, 2019) Stephen Diggle, Georgia Institute of Technology will present Understanding Social Behaviors in Microbial Populations from 1:00-2:30 p.m. in room 202, C-wing, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information.


Borderlands Produce Rescue

(Saturday, January 19, 2019) Produce On Wheels - With Out Waste (P.O.W.W.O.W.) disperses fresh produce to communities at churches, schools and other entities throughout Southern Arizona and the Metropolitan Tucson and Phoenix service areas. 10 million lbs. of fresh nutritional rescued produce annually are delivered to agency sites for distribution to supporters. Anyone can contribute $12 to shop for up to 70 lbs. of fresh produce, to share with neighbors, friends, family or someone who's in need. From 8:00-11:00 a.m. Locations: Polytechnic campus: 6935 E Williams Field Rd. Mesa, AZ 85212; Tempe campus: SW corner of Rio Salado/Packard Dr., Parking Lot 59, Tempe, AZ 85281; and West campus: 4701 W Thunderbird Rd., Northzone Lot 10, Glendale, AZ 85306. More information.


NEW!

School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning Colloquium: Aquaterra - Geography’s New Realm

(Tuesday, February 5, 2019) Jerome Dobson, University of Kansas will present Aquaterra - Geography’s New Realm from 3:00-4:30 p.m. in room 5536, Coor Hall, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information.


NEW!

3rd Annual GRI Reporters’ Summit: North America

(Monday, February 25, 2019) If you work on sustainability reporting at your organization, we've got an event that will help take your reporting to the next level, and you can still enjoy the early registration fee until January 18. At the 3rd Annual GRI Reporters' Summit you'll join sustainability reporting practitioners from across North America and learn how to make the most of the GRI Standards for your organization. The masterclasses, workshops and plenary sessions are designed for reporters of various experience levels and will help you improve your reporting with specific tools, case studies and practical solutions, learn more about the practicalities of reporting, get the latest on innovation and the most recent developments in sustainability reporting, and share your knowledge and contribute to building a stronger network of sustainability reporters. The Summit will be held at the Memorial Union, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. Register by 18 Jan for the early bird rate and get 10% off with code RSNA19ASU http://bit.ly/GRIReportersSummit.


Mapping the Grand Canyon Conference

(Thursday-Friday, February 28-March 1, 2019) The Mapping Grand Canyon Conference explores the art, science, and practice of Grand Canyon cartography. Join this celebration and critical examination of the cartographic history of a global landscape icon. Free and open to all, the conference promises a full two-day program of map-based story-telling, and transdisciplinary analysis, state-of-the-art geospatial and cartographic demonstrations, engaging hands-on activities, and open community dialogue. In the Arizona Ballroom, Memorial Union, Arizona State University, Tempe campus. More information and registration.


NEW!

Call for Abstracts: Urban Climate Research Center Annual Poster Competition

(Wednesday, March 27, 2019) We are excited to announce the call for abstracts for the UCRC Annual Poster Competition at the Memorial Union, Alumni Lounge, Room #202. The intent of this poster competition is to showcase the breadth of work around issues of urban climate at ASU. This includes all social and physical science aspects of urban climate and its interaction with society and infrastructure. The poster session is intended to highlight urban climate research from undergraduates, graduate students, and postdoctoral researchers. Completed research is preferred. Posters outlining research not yet conducted must provide sufficient details on research design. Maximum 250 words; abstract submission deadline Monday, February 11, 2019; notification of acceptance Monday, February 18, 2019; poster submission and printing deadline, Monday, March 18, 2019. Submit your abstract. Questions, contact Janet.Pinhorn@asu.edu.


2019 AEESP Research and Education Conference

(Tuesday-Thursday, May 14-16, 2019) Arizona State University is hosting the 2019 Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (AEESP) Research and Education Conference. The conference theme is "Environmental Engineers & Scientists see Cities in 4-D" and emphasizes the dimensions of the built environment, the natural environment, human health, and cyberspace. Traditionally, the major focus of environmental engineering and science has been on the dimensions and interactions of the natural environment and the built environment. The dimensions of the natural environment and built environment will continue to be important; however, these more traditional approaches will be balanced and integrated with new dimensions of increasing interest and importance, specifically human health and cyberspace. This is illustrated by active research on the interactions of the natural environment and the built environment on the human microbiome, building microbiomes, and other "biomes," and rapid advances in electronics and computer science that allow for distributed sensor networks for real-time contaminant monitoring, big data analytics, and the potential for autonomous treatment systems. "Environmental Engineers & Scientists see Cities in 4-D" also provides a coherent theme for integrating research and education. In addition to the research topics that fall under the theme, environmental engineering and environmental science programs need a venue to share advances in education research and curriculum development. The Call for Abstracts is now open and abstracts are due December 5, 2018. Technical session tracks will be organized based on the "Cities in 4-D" conference theme and environmental engineering and environmental science education. The conference website has additional details including a link for abstract submission. Please send inquiries to Conference Chair, Treavor Boyer, thboyer@asu.edu.



Off Campus


NEW!

A Sip of Science: To Catch a Cancer: When Viruses are the Culprit

(Wednesday, January 16, 2019) Join Karen Anderson, cancer physician and researcher, as she presents To Catch a Cancer: When Viruses are the Culprit from 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Vincent’s on Camelback, 3930 E Camelback Rd, Phoenix. More information and registration.


Tikkun Olam 3 Repairing the World: Guest Speaker David Baron

(Thursday, January 17, 2019) Activist and environmental lawyer David Baron with Earthjustice in DC will be here to share his life work and journey with us as it relates to the themes of Tikkun Olam 3 - environmental justice, climate change and sustainability. For many years, David worked with The Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest before moving to DC to take on even bigger issues. Join curator Joan Baron,TO3, and The Jewish Heritage Center to welcome him at 6.30 p.m. with Q&A to follow, at the Cutler Plotkin Jewish Heritage Center 122 East Culver St Phoenix, AZ 85004 - in the auditorium adjacent to the gallery exhibition. Free and open to the public - doors open at 5:30 p.m. for those wishing to see the art exhibition before the presentation. RSVP to Joan Baron 602-616-0223 or joanebaron@gmail.com.


Arizona Runs on Water: Scarcity, Challenges, and Community-based Solutions

(Friday, February 1, 2019) This year's topic is Arizona Runs on Water: Scarcity, Challenges, and Community-based Solutions. The program aims to engage everyone with an interest in how Arizona is working to meet its future water needs. It features a series of informative framework presentations, followed by community panels with presentations from all over the state, and ends with a legislators panel. The conference will take place from 7:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. at the Black Canyon Conference Center, located at 9440 N 25th Ave. in Phoenix, Arizona. More information and registration. Early bird registration until December 21, 2018.


2019 Riparian Restoration Conference

(Tuesday-Thursday, February 5-7, 2019) RiversEdge West is looking for individuals that can bring

innovative ideas, case studies, lessons learned, challenges, technologies, policy updates, adaptive management techniques, and beyond, to the forefront of the riparian restoration community at the 17th Annual Riparian Restoration Conference. You are invited to share your work and join us this February at the Desert Botanical Gardens in Phoenix, AZ. Call for abstracts until October 19, 2018. More information.


Spring 2019 Smartscape

(Tuesdays and Thursdays, February 5-March 7, 2019) Join the next Smartscape training session for landscape professionals and increase your knowledge in the design, installation, irrigation, and maintenance of desert landscapes. The University of Arizona, Maricopa County Cooperative Extension is accepting registrations for the spring 2019 Smartscape series! Classes will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3:00-6:00 p.m. at the Maricopa County Cooperative Extension office: 4341 East Broadway Road Phoenix, AZ 85040. Seats are limited and fill fast, so register today! Visit www.smartscape.org for more information and register at http://bit.ly/SmartscapeS19. Contact Kirti Mathura, Smartscape Program Coordinator, with any questions at smartscape@cals.arizona.edu or (602) 827-8206.


Leverage Points 2019: International Conference on Sustainability Research and Transformation

(Wednesday-Friday, February 6-8, 2019) Humanity sits at a crossroad between tragedy and transformation, and now is a crucial time for sustainability research. Radical approaches are needed in sustainability research and praxis if they are to meet the challenges of the 21st century. Inspired by the work of Donella Meadows' "Leverage Points: Places to intervene in a system", this conference will explore the deep leverage points that can lead to sustainability transformations, asking: how do we transform ourselves, our science, our institutions, our interventions and our societies for a better future? We hope that this conference will help us move from incremental to transformational change; extend our thinking about complex sustainability challenges and deepen our collective and transdisciplinary research practices. To be held at Leuphana University, Lüneburg, Germany. More information.


Second Biennial Population and Public Policy Conference

(Friday-Saturday, February 8-9, 2019) The Population and Public Policy Conference presented by the International Association of Applied Demographers and hosted by the University of New Mexico Geospatial and Population Studies and the University of Houston Hobby Center for Public Policy is dedicated to bringing together a diverse group of academics, researchers, community advocates and organizers, policy makers and students to exchange their experiences and research findings and how those inform public policy. This interdisciplinary gathering of researchers, practitioners, policy makers and students is an excellent platform for sharing recent innovations, trends, challenges and solutions to population and public policy issues. To be held in the Hotel Albuquerque, Albuquerque, NM. More information.


GreenBiz 19

(Tuesday-Thursday, February 26-28, 2019) GreenBiz 19 is your opportunity to join a powerful community of more than 1,200 sustainability thought leaders and practitioners - from business, government, academia and NGOs - to learn about emerging trends and promising opportunities in sustainable business. To be held at the JW Marriott Desert Ridge, Phoenix, AZ. More information and registration.


Emerging Materials Congress 2019: Unearthing the Research in Materials Science and Nanotechnology

(Thursday-Friday, March 7-8, 2019) The Emerging Materials Congress 2019 is a unique event and platform for global scientists, researchers, directors, professors, engineers from the research areas of materials science, nanotechnology, chemistry and physics to share their knowledge and research experiences with interactive panel discussion and sessions by keynote lectures, oral presentations, and poster presentation. The scientific sessions will comprise research areas of biomaterials, polymer science, materials science, nanotechnology, tissue engineering, carbon materials, energy materials, biopolymers, 3D printing, ceramics, conductive materials, electrical, optical and magnetic materials, materials applications, etc. More information and registration.


Intermountain Sustainability Summit

(Thursday-Friday, March 21-22, 2019) The Intermountain Sustainability Summit is an annual benchmark event where sustainability professionals from business, non-profits, government, and education come together, along with the next generation of leaders, to learn, share, network and build momentum as we work to improve our communities, environment and economy. At Weber State University in Ogden, UT. More information.


13th International Congress of Orthopterology Society: Challenges in Front of Climatic and Environmental Changes

(Sunday-Thursday, March 24-28, 2019) This Congress will be organized for the first time in Africa. The Congress will be organized in collaboration with the IBN ZOHR University of Agadir, the National Center for Control of Desert Locust and the Orthopterists’ Society which has 500 members from 60 countries in partnership with several national and international institutions. The congress covers the different aspects related to orthopterology: Biology, ecology, taxonomy, physiology, endocrinology, cytogenetics. It will be held in Agadir, Morocco. More information.


A Climate for Change: Engineering Sustainability ‘19 Call for Abstracts

(Sunday-Tuesday, April 7-9, 2019) This conference will be held at the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA. Seeking papers and posters in the following focus areas: regenerative built environment; “one water” engineering and science; sustainable mobility; circular economy; engineering and sustainability learning and engagement; and behavioral science for sustainability. The conference welcomes submissions from academia, industry, nonprofit organizations, government institutions, and other interested parties. To qualify for acceptance, please submit a 200 word abstract electronically on or before October 31, 2018. The Conference Organizing Committee will inform all submitting authors whether their papers have been accepted for presentation by November 30, 2018. More information.


Eleventh International Conference on Climate Change: Impacts & Responses

(Tuesday-Wednesday, April 16-17, 2019) Each year, the International Conference on Climate Change: Impacts & Responses draws a diverse group of participants from all over the world. Our Program Development team draws on this diversity to craft a rich and distinctive conference experience. The conference will be held at the Pryzbyla Center, The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. More information.


4th Open Science Meeting 2019: Transforming Land Systems for People and Nature

(Wednesday-Friday, April 24-26, 2019) The meeting will be held in Bern, Switzerland and will focus on topics and themes that aim to advance our understanding of how land systems can form the basis for sustainability transformations. This conference represents a unique opportunity to build and enhance scientific capacity and enable transformations to a sustainable future by identifying core questions, synthesizing research, and setting future agendas. Conference attendees will strive to develop connections between researchers and stakeholders from civil society, government, and the private sector, and to bridge science and decision-making for sustainable management and governance of land use worldwide. More information and registration.


GreenBiz: Circularity 2019

(Tuesday-Thursday, June 18-20, 2019) The world is facing stark limits in providing enough food, water and goods for 8.5 billion people by 2030, and companies are under increased pressure to reduce waste - including plastics and excess packaging - and to create innovative products and services that use more renewable feedstocks. To address these challenges, circularity has emerged as a business strategy for designing and manufacturing products and materials that have continuous and infinite life-cycles, or which can be returned safely to the soil. Circularity 19 is a three-day conference held in Minneapolis, MN that will bring together more than 500 thought leaders and practitioners to define and accelerate the circular economy. Through inspirational plenaries, interactive breakouts, hands-on design charrettes, networking opportunities and a solutions-focused expo, Circularity 19 will inspire, inform and empower participants to make the shift to a circular economy. More information. 


World Forum on Climate Justice

(Wednesday-Friday, June 19-21, 2019) This inaugural World Forum on Climate Justice will bring together leading civil society groups, academics, business representatives, members of the public, and policymakers to foster new thinking and explore pressing topics in climate justice advocacy, research, policy and practice as we adapt to reach the 1.5°C goal. Call for papers until January 25, 2019. The conference will take place at Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK. More information and registration.


SISE 2019: Implementation

(Thursday, July 18-Tuesday, July 30, 2019) The Summer Institute on Sustainability and Energy (SISE) is a two-week "boot camp" for future decision makers eager to join the sustainability and energy revolution happening around the globe. Held annually since 2011, the program boasts over 400 alumni. During weekdays, SISE'ers participate in high-level talks, visit energy and sustainability sites, and network. During evenings and weekends, they work collaboratively on a research project and enjoy exploring Chicago. This year’s theme, Implementation, moves beyond the “what” to the “how.” Building on the research of previous years, 2019 SISE Fellows will engage with Chicago communities and collaborators to develop critical strategies to help local neighborhoods realize their vision for their future. They will engage with theory and case studies, and then move to the streets and homes of our Chicago neighbors and communities where real change is made at the ground level. Senior-level undergraduates (as of the fall of 2018), graduate students, recent graduates, and professionals working in the fields of sustainability and energy are eligible to apply. Applications due May 30, 2019. For more information.


Forming the Future: An Interdisciplinary Conference

(Monday-Tuesday, September 2-3, 2019) Thinking about the future often focuses on its ‘content’: what might happen. Similarly, thinking about ‘future studies’ often concentrates on its goals, concepts and methods. But what about the forms in which the future comes couched? How does the medium in which the future is presented – its genres, structures, conventions – shape or influence what the future might include? What forms do representations of the future currently take in different disciplines and fields of practice – from fiction to non-fiction, the visual to the textual, science to politics – and to what effect? Can we make our representations of the future more efficacious, with a view to the current world situation? And what might different fields learn from each other, or how might they combine, in order to do this? The conference will be held at the University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK. Call for papers is open until May 1, 2019. More information.



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NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS


NEW!

Meet sustainability student Hailey Campbell

Hailey Campbell has lofty goals and the work ethic to achieve them. She knows what it means to have multiple irons in the fire and doesn’t shy away from getting involved with the sustainability community. Read more.


NEW!

Scientific pursuits inside monastery walls

For Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th and current Dalai Lama, his love of science began in childhood. Curious to know what made a mechanical watch tick, he took it apart and put it back together again. Despite the success of that early endeavor, he didn’t receive any formal scientific education until he was much older, something he considered a disservice when he found that it actually complemented and enhanced his Buddhist training and understanding of the scriptures. Today, science education is part of the curriculum in Buddhist monasteries, thanks to the Dalai Lama’s resolve to make it so. Read more.


NEW!

Nobility for the environment

A prominent British biographer, broadcaster, eco-critic and Shakespearean is visiting Arizona State University this spring to elevate further the university’s already top-ranked humanities research.  From January to February 2019, Sir Jonathan Bate, professor and provost of Worcester College, Oxford University, is distinguished visiting professor in ASU’s Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability. He is consulting on an emerging medical humanities project, delivering several lectures on themes of sustainability and wellness — both on and off the ASU campus — and co-teaching an eco-literature course with ASU English Professor Mark Lussier. Read more.


NEW!

The ethics of conservation: Should we bring back extinct species?

The losses of animal species have spurred some conservationists to do just about anything to save endangered animals and have inspired researchers to develop technology that might bring back once-extinct species. But even if we could bring back extinct species, should we? Read more.


NEW!

Connecting students to hospice and palliative care as career options through real-world experience

The World Health Organization estimates roughly 47 million people worldwide are currently living with dementia. By 2050, that number is expected to almost triple. John O’Donnell, 77, of Sun City, Arizona, has been living with dementia for the past seven years. For the last few months, Arizona State University health sciences undergraduate Arbella Yousif has been visiting him and his wife, Karen, once a week for a few hours as part of a recently introduced course on dementia at the College of Health Solutions. Read more.


NEW!

Rob and Melani Walton strengthen their commitment to ASU

Arizona State University is pleased to announce the permanent establishment of the Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service, furthering the institution’s efforts to become a global leader in sustainability education and applied research. The Solutions Service will serve as the umbrella entity for all the programs previously seed-funded in earlier investments by Rob and Melani Walton through their charitable foundation. Read more.


NEW!

President’s Award for Sustainability

The President’s Award for Sustainability recognizes ASU faculty and staff who have worked as departmental, interdepartmental or transdisciplinary teams that have demonstrated excellence in fostering sustainability at Arizona State University. This award recognizes the development, implementation and promotion of sustainability principles, solutions, programs and services. The university’s vision is for a sustainability program that encompasses all of ASU, engages the internal and external communities alike, and integrates the teaching, learning, research and business missions of the University. Sustainability projects/programs may be related to one or more of the following actions: use-inspired research; teaching and learning; active engagement; or campus operations. The 2019 application deadline is 5:00 p.m., February 6, 2019. More information and application.


NEW!

10 groups that will be key to combating climate change in 2019 (from GreenBiz.com)

Let's be frank: 2018 was not exactly a banner year for the planet. Nearly every major environmental assessment presented grim results: crucial habitats such as tropical forests continue to disappear; wildlife populations declined 60 percent over the last 40 years; and, perhaps most alarming, we’re failing to make the progress we need to keep the climate within safe boundaries. Read more.


NEW!

ASU Social Embeddedness Report 2018

ASU’s 2018 Social Embeddedness Report shows some of the many ways that ASU interacts and partners with our community. The Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability’s Sustainable Cities Network is featured on pages 22-23. Read more.


NEW!

ASU and Phoenix issue new call for ventures to innovate for waste prevention and diversion

Arizona State University, named the most innovative school in the nation by U.S. News and World Report for four straight years, in collaboration with the city of Phoenix — named the top performing city overall by Governing and Living Cities — are calling for innovators and entrepreneurs to participate in the RISN Incubator, a diverse solutions business development and accelerator program. The application period is open now until January 31. Read more.


NEW!

International Research Experience for Undergraduates: Philippine PIRE Project

Opportunities are available for motivated undergraduate students to learn and explore the fields of molecular ecology and genomics through participation in the Philippine PIRE project. This international Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) will provide students summer research experience in the field and the laboratory, theoretical and hands-on training in advanced molecular methodology, and immersion in the culture of the Philippines. Undergraduate students selected from Old Dominion University, Texas A&M University Corpus Christi, Rutgers University, and Arizona State University will participate in the program alongside U.S. and Filipino students, early career professionals, and collaborating principal investigators to investigate the impact of humans on the biodiversity of marine fishes in the region over the last century. Application deadline is January 25, 2019. More information and how to apply.


NEW!

Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Science, Technology and Policy Program

The Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Science, Technology and Policy (STP) Program serves as a next step in the educational and professional development of scientists and engineers interested in energy efficiency and renewable energy policy. The EERE STP Program provides an opportunity for highly talented scientists and engineers to participate in policy-related projects at DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy in Washington, D.C. and Golden, CO site office. EERE STP participants apply the expertise gained from their education and history of conducting research to new and ongoing EERE initiatives. Applications for the STP program are accepted and reviewed all year, except for applications to the Solar SunShot Initiative. SunShot applications are reviewed (and offers are made) two times per year with rolling application deadlines of January 15th and June 15th. The SunShot application review process takes approximately 3-4 months. More information and application.


Spring School of Sustainability Graduate Class: Rethinking Community Engagement: Toward Ethical and Reflexive Engagement Approaches in Sustainability

Enroll in a new Spring 2019 course, SOS 591/ASB 591 Rethinking Community Engagement, and help us transform how we think about and approach community engagement in sustainability education, research & practice. This course represents a key capacity building mechanism for adopting more ethical, reflexive, and humble engagement approaches that better facilitate co-created knowledge and action pathways toward sustainability. Open to graduate students from all disciplines. Questions? Contact Dr. Julianna Gwiszcz (jgwiszcz@asu.edu) for more information.


Nature, Art & Habitat Residency (NAHR): An ECO-Laboratory of Multidisciplinary Practice Taleggio Valley, Bergamo - Northern Italy

The Nature, Art & Habitat Residency: An ECO-Laboratory of Multidisciplinary Practice, located in the Taleggio Valley near Bergamo, Italy, is a summer program that aims to unfold and display a sensitive culture that responds to nature's needs and uses nature's insights as a source of inspiration and as measure of impacts on available resources. The ultimate goal of NAHR is to uncover intimate links between all living organisms in order to support more resilient development where humans and nature can successfully coexist. The 2019 topic is Grasses and Pastures: Imagining a Regenerative Economy of Cheese and is now accepting applications. This year, NAHR looks at how multiple disciplines coming together can start to address, design, implement and respond to cyclical and seasonal economy. With the Taleggio Valley as case study, one is clearly aware of its largest assets: its biodiversity; its people; and the way the blending of these assets over centuries has generated a rich culture of cheese production - two of the most famous being Taleggio and Strachitunt. Applications are due by February 5, 2019. More information and application.


Babbitt Dissertation Fellowship Program

The Lincoln Institute's Babbitt Dissertation Fellowship Program assists PhD students at U.S. universities whose research builds on, and contributes to, the concerns of the Babbitt Center: integration of land and water policy to advance water sustainability and resilience, particularly in the West. The program provides support to scholars early in their careers. Upcoming application deadline April 1, 2019. More information.


Water Resources Research Center 2018 Photo Contest: Arizona Runs on Water

We had such a great response to last year's open-ended approach to our photo contest that we're doin' it again this year. Just show us Arizona water. Yup, that's as specific as we're gonna get. Use your creativity and technical ability to express the many ways water transforms our state and the many ways our state transforms water. Capture anything from people and nature to business and agriculture. It's completely up to you. Just make sure your picture(s) relate to water in Arizona! The winning photographs will be featured on the WRRC website and at the 2019 WRRC Annual Conference on Feb. 1. The winners will also be recognized at the February 2019 Chocolate Fest. High school students can submit as well! Submit your photo(s) here: https://wrrc.arizona.edu/photo.


NEW!

Arizona Department of Water Resource Drought Program

December 2018 drought summary is online.


December Southwest Climate Outlook

The December 2018 Southwest Climate Outlook is online.


CLIMAS Podcast: December 2018: The Snow-tacular Podcast (or The Pod-tacular Snowcast) Edition

Tune into the Southwest Climate podcasts on iTunes or Southwest Climate Change Network.


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OPPORTUNITIES

Institute Job Openings


Assistant Professor Position in Resource, Environmental, or Energy Economics

To review and apply to this position, please visit https://apply.interfolio.com/58186. If not filled, reviews will occur every two weeks thereafter until the search is closed.


Instructor – School of Sustainability

To review and apply to this position, please visit http://apply.interfolio.com/58404. The application deadline is January 31, 2019; If not filled, reviews will occur every two weeks thereafter until the search is closed.


Lecturer (all ranks) in Sustainability

To review and apply to this position, please visit http://apply.interfolio.com/57835. The application deadline is January 31, 2019; if not filled, reviews will continue every two weeks until the search is closed.


Postdoctoral Research Associate, Urban Ecology, Central Arizona–Phoenix LTER

To review and apply to this position, please visit https://apply.interfolio.com/58761. The application deadline is January 31, 2019; If not filled, reviews will occur every two weeks thereafter until the search is closed.


NEW!

Student, Research Aide, Central Arizona–Phoenix LTER

To assist with research of arthropod communities of the Phoenix metropolitan area. To review and apply please go to ASU Student Jobs, click on "Search On-Campus Jobs" and enter the requisition 48236BR. Application deadline is January 15, 2019.



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Other Jobs


Postdoctoral Fellowship, International Issues and Sustainable Development, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN

Application deadline is January 14, 2019. More information.


Watershed Program Associate, Clean Lakes Alliance, Madison, WI

Application deadline is January 14, 2019. More information.


Assistant Professor, Environment and Sustainability, Western Colorado University, Gunnison, CO

Application review begins January 15, 2019. More information.


Assistant Professor, Science Communication for Environmental Decision-Making and Policy, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA

Application deadline January 15, 2019. More information.


Garden Club of America Award in Desert Studies, Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, AZ Application deadline January 15, 2019. More information.


NEW!

Economist, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC

Application deadline January 16, 2019. More information.


Geoscientists in the Parks, Internship Program, Yellowstone National Park, Mammoth, WY

Application deadline January 20, 2019. More information.


NEW!

Water Conservation Specialist, City of Tempe, Tempe, AZ

Application review begins January 24, 2019. Go to City of Tempe Careers and search for job title.


Assistant/Associate Professor, Agricultural Hydrology and Water Quality, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Wooster, OH

Application deadline January 31, 2019. More information.


Native American Congressional Internship, Udall Foundation, Washington, D.C.

Application deadline January 31, 2019. More information.


Post Doctorate RA - Watershed Data-Model Integration, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA

Application deadline January 31, 2019. More information.


NEW!

Watershed Group Coordinator (part-time), Friends of the Rio de Flag, Flagstaff, AZ

Application deadline January 31, 2019. More information.


Assistant Professor, Geography and Environmental Sustainability, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK

Application deadline February 1, 2019. More information.


Professor in Hydrology and Water Resources, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, University of Copenhagen

Application deadline February 1, 2019. More information.


2019-2020 Policy Communication Fellows Program, Population Reference Bureau and the African Institute for Development Policy

Application deadline February 12, 2019. More information.


NEW!

Collegiate Assistant Professor, Environmental Informatics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA

Application review begins February 14, 2019. More information.


Adjunct Faculty, Environmental Management, Undergraduate School, University of Maryland University College, Killeen, TX

More information.


Assistant Professor, Biological Sciences, University of Texas-El Paso, El Paso, TX

More information.


Clean Water Communications Coordinator, Orange County, Coastkeeper, Costa Mesa, CA

More information.


WordPress Designer, Arizona Sustainability Alliance, Phoenix, AZ

This is a volunteer position. More information.



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