2014

The wild Amazon

Allison Miller

The wild Amazon

There’s only one day left in Brazil and I’m sad to see this journey come to a close. The last week was spent traveling to Santarem, where we boarded the Don Giuseppe for our five-day boat trip. We traveled down the Tapajos River, an estuary of the Amazon River, and visited three indigenous communities. These communities proved to be an essential component of the Amazon forest being protected. They have been allotted to stay on the land and work with the land instead of just taking from the land and their culture resides much in area which makes them a primary representative of the Amazon forest. Isolated from much of civilization they earn their livelihoods from fishing, growing crops, harvesting honey, making crafts, etc. Without a living and healthy environment these people would become completely detached from all they’ve grown to know.

In response to the need to maintain the forest, we also went to visit a sustainable timber extraction site. In contrast of illegal logging, which makes up 90% of all timber exports in Brazil, Floresta Nacional do Tapajos extracts timber according to Brazilian law. The community business runs based on the needs of the forest instead of the demand for timber. Their land is divided into 32 areas based on the knowledge that it takes 32 years for the forest to rebuild itself and they only take select trees from each area so that from a human’s perspective the forest looks virtually untouched. Their method of extraction doesn’t promote deforestation or diffraction which allows for no biodiversity to be lost and also provides income for the local community for their well sought after resources.

Anything can happen in Spain and Morocco

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Anything can happen in Spain and Morocco

Lynnsee Starr is a junior studying business sustainability and finance in the . She’s also working towards a minor in communications and an international business certificate. When she’s not studying, she’s busy managing the organization. This summer she visited Spain and Morocco with the Global Sustainability Studies Program. While there, Starr compared policymaking and gained global context of sustainable development.

What attracted you to the Spain and Morocco program?

One of the most important things to me when searching for a study abroad program is being able to visit a place I wouldn’t be able to visit otherwise. I wanted to visit a country that isn’t a typical vacation spot and for me, that is exactly what Morocco was. My interest peaked even more when I saw that I wouldn’t just get the chance to visit one continent, I would get the chance to visit two! If that wasn’t enough, I was also able to take a class required for my business sustainability major and be one step closer to completing my degree.

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Bringing home Hong Kong

The Hong Kong skyline lit up at night during the daily Symphony of Lights.

The Hong Kong skyline lit up at night during the daily Symphony of Lights.

Bringing home Hong Kong

By Barton Robison

Ten days from my return to the U.S., and I’m still dreaming about monkeys, street food and sewage treatment plants. Blame it on the jet lag (that I just got over a few days ago) or the weight loss (because China is very vegetarian un-friendly), but I’m completely worn out! Hong Kong was everything I had expected and so much more. Here are the three biggest takeaways I brought home with me.

Hong Kong is unique. Looking back on it, what stands out most are the contradictions of the city: forward-thinking, yet steeped in tradition; impossibly dense, yet run wild with nature; a pro-democratic culture overseen by mainland China. So many things about this place shouldn’t work, and yet it all comes together in one of the most fascinating places I’ve ever visited.

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Life after Morocco

Enjoying the rose festival in Morocco. Photo by Parker Helble.

Enjoying the rose festival in Morocco. Photo by Parker Helble.

Life after Morocco

I am home, safe and sound. Life is back to normal. I wake up to take my dogs out and feed them breakfast. Then I get my coffee, have breakfast, check my email and maybe (definitely) watch some Colbert Report. I do a few chores around the house, run some errands, take my dogs for a walk and lay by the pool. I make dinner, watch a movie (or two) and then I go to bed. Summer break is great, right?

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Leaving a new world

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The CityU-ASU energy group outside Kowloon Walled City Gate.

Leaving a new world

Hard to believe this trip is already over; it was as short as it was jam-packed with activities and hard work. I can now say that I’ve visited four continents, and I hope that the rest will follow soon (including Antarctica). Hong Kong is the perfect model of a metropolis. The city copes incredibly well with very difficult spatial and geographic constraints and has set a high standard for urban design.

The final grind

In terms of classes, this week was a lot different than the last. Field trips and lectures were mostly replaced by group work time to be devoted to our final poster and policy presentation. We spent numerous hours every day this week refining our ideas, phrasing policy statements, absorbing feedback from Dr. Melnick and Robert Gibson (one of the CityU faculty working with our class) and deciding on poster layouts.

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Learning to learn: A cultural evolution

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Our group on day 1 at the top of Victoria’s Peak with a view of downtown Hong Kong, Victoria’s harbor and Kowloon City.

Learning to learn: A cultural evolution

My hand shoots into the air, along with the majority of the rest of the ASU students studying abroad with me. The professor ignores our eagerness to respond while he looks around for a less familiar hand to sprout up from the garden of thinkers. All of the Hong Kong City University students are more than capable of answering his question, but unlike the ASU individuals, these students are quiet group thinkers.

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Everything new, everything good

Max at beach-HK

Max at the beach in Hong Kong

Everything new, everything good

By Maximilian Christman

Wow, the days have really blown by here in Hong Kong. I feel like I just started this trip yesterday, but I’m already at the halfway point. With five straight days of intense classes, this laid back weekend has been much appreciated.

The daily routine

While every day has been different here in Hong Kong, there are some commonalities to each day of the previous week. We start in a classroom at 9:00 a.m. with a few PowerPoint lectures from various people. My personal favorite was one last week when we heard about the history of Hong Kong from Mr. Jason Wordie.

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Documenting sustainability solutions: A videographer’s journey in Hong Kong

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Our team on a field visit to Kowloon Energy East, a company working to redesign urban space for public use.

Documenting sustainability solutions: A videographer’s journey in Hong Kong

We’re currently on a bus overlooking , a hugely impressive (and terribly disgusting) expanse stretching across 110 acres in Nim Wan, Tuen Mun. This isn’t exactly where one hopes to end up on holiday, but this isn’t your average holiday.

I’m here in Hong Kong to document ASU’s study abroad program focusing on urban sustainability, a partnership with the local in Kowloon in which students from both countries are teamed up to research problems facing major cities today, and working to innovate solutions specific to Hong Kong. As a videographer by trade and a marketer by practice, my understanding of sustainability issues is ignorant at best. And after just two days here, it’s blowing my mind how important the work these students are doing truly is.

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Saying goodbye

Shirley serving tea-Morocco

I got to serve Moroccan mint tea!

Saying goodbye

By Shirley-Ann Behravesh

I sometimes feel in song. Not my own, but songs that I’ve at some point listened to and relate to at certain times. This is one of those times, and I can’t seem to get this song out of my head:

“Saying goodbye, why is it sad?

Makes us remember the good times we’ve had

Much more to say, foolish to try

It’s time for saying goodbye.”

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A different desert

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Getting ready ride a camel through the Sahara! I named him Humphrey.

A different desert

By Ren Andres

Greetings from Merzouga! We are currently staying at a beautiful hotel in this small town just on the edge of the Sahara desert. After a one night and day adventure in this desert, the swimming pool here has never been so refreshing. In the last 48 hours, we rode camels to our overnight stay among the dunes and had a Jeep tour of the desert the next day. After showering, the amount of sand on the bottom of the shower now could be its own desert!

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