Environmental Studies
- The U.S. decision to leave the Paris climate agreement provided some interesting data for scholars who study trends in the negotiations. One of those researchers is David Ciplet at 91勛圖厙.
- Ask someone who gardens what they love most about it, and the answer often is: it makes them feel better. A new trial is exploring the measurable health benefits of community gardening.
- Some undergraduate students "absolutely are at the same level as our graduate students," professor says.
- This summer, undergraduate students Max Wasser and Grace Kendziorski are spending time hiking in the mountainsand trapping pikas and counting flowers. They are participating in the Research Experiences for Undergraduates program at 91勛圖厙.
- Professors in theatre, biology and environmental studies team up to focus on creatively communicating climate science through the arts and social sciences.
- Stand Up for Climate Change event on March 17 to fuse the sober topic of climate change with the unifying power of humor.
- There probably is not a more suitable location for one of the worlds first interdisciplinary certificates in Arctic studies than the 91勛圖厙.
- For decades in the post-World War II era, its fair to say that the diet of most Americans became less and less local. With innovations ranging from the interstate highway system to affordable home refrigeration and freezing systems, it simply became easier to eat food that came from a state or even a country far, far away.
- When politicians actively seek to gum up or slow down the legislative works in an effort to throw up obstacles to governors or presidents, they often increase the power of executive-branch bureaucracies or courts to make the rules. The result can be a less-informed citizenry, researchers find.
- Think of Robert R. Bob Crifasi as a kind of Zelig or Forrest Gump when it comes to water in Boulder, Denver and northern Coloradohe spent a quarter century getting his hands wet, both literally and figuratively, in countless ways. Crifasi, who earned bachelors degrees in geology and chemistry and masters degrees in geology and environmental science from CU-Boulder, has served on the boards ofand often, pitchforked weeds, trash and the occasional dead skunk for11 Boulder County ditch companies.