On Campus Event: “Diversity, decline and sustainability of wild bees”, Thursday. 2.21 @ 4:25, Druck 20

“Diversity, decline and sustainability of wild bees”

Dr. Sandra Rehan is an Assistant Professor at the University of New Hampshire in the Department of Biological Sciences.  In her talk, she will discuss the diversity of wild bees in Northern New England including status assessments. The specific questions she will address are: What species reside in Northern New England and what are their habitat requirements?  Do species respond to land use change and how can we sustain healthy pollinator populations?  Dr. Rehan addresses these questions through a combination of field- and museum-based studies and through the integration of behavior, ecology and genetics.

Dr. Rehan earned her bachelor’s and PhD degrees from the Brock University, Canada.

Internship Opportunities: The Nature Conservancy, Wisconsin

Baraboo Hills Land Stewardship Intern: Learn about land stewardship and help manage preserves in the beautiful Baraboo Hills this summer! Work in the field alongside Conservancy staff and gain hands-on experience in invasive species management, boundary posting, easement monitoring, GIS, prescribed fire, volunteer engagement, and more. This is a 10-week paid summer internship based in our Baraboo, WI office. Deadline: February 24.

Mukwonago Water and Land Conservation Intern: Spend your summer working outdoors and on the water in the Mukwonago River Watershed! Help preserve habitat quality by monitoring boat recreation, collecting and compiling data, and reaching out to boaters and community members about aquatic invasive species. You’ll also assist with land stewardship projects and agricultural research on the impact of prairie strips in crop fields. This is a 10-week paid summer internship based in our East Troy, WI office. Deadline: February 24.

Outreach and Communications Intern: Connect with volunteers and the public and help spread the word about conservation work! You’ll contribute communications material to our website and newsletter, plan and attend events, take photos, and interact with volunteers. Meanwhile, you’ll learn about Wisconsin conservation and gain skills in public outreach and marketing. This is a 10-week paid summer internship based in our Madison, WI office, with some field trip opportunities. Deadline: March 3.

Development Intern: Join a close-knit development team with an invaluable role in supporting land and water conservation in Wisconsin! You’ll gain experience with all aspects of fundraising work, with a special focus on connecting with and collecting stories from longtime supporters. Projects will include preparing for events, thanking donors, managing data, and writing materials. This is a 10-week paid summer internship based in our Madison, WI office with occasional field trip opportunities. Deadline: March 3.

Seasonal Summer Job; Mentor for High School Interns: Inspire the next generation of conservationists by serving as the Mentor for our summer high school internship program in Mukwonago and Milwaukee. You’ll supervise, work alongside, and create a positive experience for a team of six high school interns working in the Conservancy’s Mukwonago preserves and Milwaukee County Parks. This is a 12-week paid position from early June to late August. Strong candidates will have previous work experience with youth and in outdoor settings as well as cross-cultural experience. Deadline: February 24.

Get more details and apply now: www.nature.org/careers

On Campus Event: “Institutional Resilience in Turbulent Times”, Mon 2/11, 7PM (Kresge Auditorium)

 “Institutional Resilience in Turbulent Times”, Allen Springer
Monday, Feb 11 7:00 PM
Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center

Professor Allen Springer will explore how contemporary international institutions are responding to the challenges posed by a wave of populist and nationalist sentiment, which often challenges the relevance of the institutions themselves. How do institutions operating in such diverse arenas as security, humanitarian, and environmental policy absorb and adapt to these pressures and attempt to confront effectively issues ranging from major transboundary movements of people seeking political asylum to global climate change?

Springer is a scholar of international environmental law and policy, focusing on issues of multilateral environmental governance, particularly in a North American context. He is the author of The International Law of Pollution: Protecting the Global Environment in a World of Sovereign States, and Cases of Conflict: Transboundary Disputes and the Development of International Environmental Law. A graduate of Amherst College and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Springer joined the Bowdoin faculty in 1976, serving as Bowdoin’s Dean of Students from 1980-82 and chairing the department of government and legal studies on several occasions. Springer delivered the Karofsky Faculty Encore Lecture in 2002, and in 2006 received the Bowdoin Alumni Council Award for Faculty and Staff.

William Nelson Cromwell, a successful and nationally respected New York lawyer, established the professorship which bears his name as a gesture of admiration for the College which produced many of the men who worked for and with his law firm. Born in 1854, Cromwell rose quickly to prominence in the world of legal affairs in New York. The William Nelson Cromwell Chair was provided for in his estate upon his death in 1948. It is Bowdoin’s only chair designed essentially for prelaw study.

Free and open to the public.

On Campus Event: “Aquifer Ethnography and the Horizons of Depletion”, Wed. Feb 13, 4:30 PM (Kresge Auditorium)

“Aquifer Ethnography and the Horizons of Depletion”
Wednesday, Feb 13 4:30 PM
Kresge AUditorium, Visual Arts Center

How might “thinking like an aquifer” help challenge the conjoined crises of ecologies, democracies and hermeneutics that define the contemporary? To explore this question, this lecture offers an experimental ethnographic account of aquifer depletion on the U.S. Great Plains. Combining visual and textual imagery, it charts how depletion accretes over generations to become a porous threshold of belonging indistinguishable from partisan and epistemic divides. In doing so, it offers a wider reflection on the ways auto-ethnography of settler legacies may illuminate anti-essentialist approaches to the social worlds emerging along frontiers of destruction and change.

Lucas Bessire is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma whose work addresses extraction, power, and genre. He is the author of Behold the Black Caiman: A Chronicle of Ayoreo Life (University of Chicago Press, 2014) and creator of the Ayoreo Video Project (2017). He is currently a Fellow at the Radcliffe Insitute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.  During his time at Radcliffe, Bessire is completing an auto-ethnographic account of aquifer depletion on the High Plains. The book project charts how people inhabit the imminent ends of groundwater in order to reflect more broadly on the defining conundrums of our political present and the potential of ethnography to cross divides.

Bessire is the recipient of various awards and fellowships, including from the American Council of Learned Societies, the Institute for Advanced Study, the National Science Foundation, the Reed Foundation, the Society for Cultural Anthropology, and the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. He earned a certificate in documentary filmmaking and a PhD in anthropology from New York University.

Sponsored by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, and the Earth and Oceanographic Science, Environmental Studies, and Latin American Studies Programs.

On Campus Event: “The Radical King: His Final Years” Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Lecture with Taylor Branch, Wed. Feb 13, 7PM, Kresge

“The Radical King: His Final Years.” Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Lecture with Taylor Branch
Wednesday, Feb 13 7:00 PM
Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center

Taylor Branch is an American author and public speaker best known for his landmark narrative history of the civil rights era, America in the King Years. The trilogy’s first book, Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63, won the Pulitzer Prize and numerous other awards. Two successive volumes also gained critical and popular success: Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-65, and At Canaan’s Edge: America in the King Years, 1965-1968. Branch’s work on Dr. King and the American Civil Rights Movement required over 24 years of intensive research. He earned his M.P.A. from Princeton University and is a recipient of the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship.

  • There will be a reception, book signing, and Q&A immediately following the lecture.
  • A post-lecture reflection will commence at 9:15 pm at Ladd House.

Announcement: Island Institute Employers Info Session, 2/14, Lancaster Lounge @ 7PM

Island Institute Employer Information Session
Thursday, Feb 14, 7:00 PM
Lancaster Lounge

The Island Institute works alongside Maine’s island and coastal leaders to catalyze community sustainability in the state’s 120 island and coastal communities and share what works among these diverse communities and beyond.

Internship Opportunity (2 year): Island Fellows Program

The Island Institute was founded in 1983 by Peter Ralston and Philip Conkling. Throughout its history, the organization has addressed a variety of needs in Maine’s island and coastal communities and now focuses on supporting them through three strategic priority areas:

Today, under the leadership of president Rob Snyder, the Island Institute’s work remains rooted in Maine, but has expanded through partnerships with similar communities off the coast of the Carolinas, Alaska, Maryland, and elsewhere. With more than 150,000 year-round islanders in the United States, there is no shortage of interest in the Institute’s work or partners for its programming.

Our Mission

The Island Institute works to sustain Maine’s island and coastal communities, and exchanges ideas and experiences to further the sustainability of communities here and elsewhere.

Our Vision

We envision that Maine’s year-round island communities will thrive and lead as examples of sustainability.