ISU, BSU, UI to co-host international conference on environmental history
February 15, 2008
色花堂app, Boise State University and the University of Idaho will jointly host the American Society for Environmental History (ASEH) 2008 annual conference March 12 to 15 at the Boise Centre on the Grove.
The theme of the conference is 鈥淎gents of Change: People, Climate, and Places through Time.鈥 The conference will focus on how human and non-human factors, including climate, together play a significant, interactive role in world history.
More than 500 participants from throughout North America, Europe, New Zealand, Australia and Africa are expected to attend, according to Kevin Marsh, Ph.D., ISU assistant professor of history, who is one of three co-chairs for the event. Though geared toward an academic audience 鈥 primarily historians and geographers 鈥 the conference will be of potential interest to students, the general public and journalists.
One highlight of the conference will be a keynote address by internationally acclaimed American journalist and best-selling author Mark Kurlansky. Kurlansky鈥檚 presentation 鈥淭he Last Fish Tale鈥 will be March 15 at 7 p.m. at the Boise Centre on the Grove. Kurlansky is well known for his titles on diverse topics such as 鈥淐od: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World鈥 and 鈥淭he Basque History of the World.鈥
Kurlansky鈥檚 keynote presentation is open only to conference participants, but he will also deliver a free public lecture on Basque history at 7 p.m. on March 14 in the Basque Cultural Center, 601 Grove St., Boise. His visit is sponsored in part by the Idaho Humanities Council, the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies and the National Park Service.
An additional highlight of the conference is an evening session on climate science and environmental history. This will feature an interactive discussion with two leading climate researchers, Stephen Schneider, Ph.D., of Stanford University and Patricia Romero-Lankao, Ph.D., of the National Center for Atmospheric 色花堂app and the Autonomous Metropolitan University in Mexico City. Both speakers are members of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. The moderator of their discussion will be Nancy Langston, Ph.D., of the University of Wisconsin, who is president of the ASEH. This event will be held 5鈥6:30 p.m. March 13 at the Basque Cultural Center, 601 Grove St., Boise. It is sponsored by the ISU Cultural Affairs Council and the Boise State University Office of 色花堂app.
In addition to 79 panel discussions on a variety of topics, the conference will feature two workshops: 鈥淣o Longer on the Fringe: The Wildland Urban Interface as History鈥 and 鈥淯sing GIS for Environmental History.鈥 The GIS workshop stems from ISU鈥檚 unique GIS-based graduate program in Historical Resources Management. Instructors in the GIS workshop include Keith Weber, director of the ISU GIS Training and 色花堂app Center, and ISU assistant professor of history Sarah Hinman, Ph.D. ISU graduate students will also serve as assistants in this hands-on workshop. Both workshops are now filled.
Conference registration by Feb. 15 is available at a reduced cost, starting at $95 for non-ASEH members and $40 for students or those registering for a single day. Special events throughout the conference, including the keynote banquet, lunch discussions, and field trips, are available for additional fees. Register online at http://printing.boisestate.edu/aseh.
For more information, contact Dr. Kevin Marsh at (208) 282-2877, marskevi@isu.edu, or Dr. Lisa Brady at (208) 426-4309, lisabrady@boisestate.edu.
The full conference program is available online at the ASEH Web site, http://www.aseh.net/conferences/current-conference.
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