News
- Alice will be awarded a $1500. scholarships from Colorado Environmental Management Society Scholarship Committee. Alice was selected for this scholarship based on her academic performance, experience and extracurricular activities, and demonstrated
- Meredith has been named a Philanthropic Education Organization (P.E.O.) Evelyn K. Aitken Named Scholar. The P.E.O. Scholar Awards (PSA) were established in 1991 to provide substantial merit-based awards for women pursuing doctoral degrees in the U.S
- Emily Yeh's Taming Tibet: Landscape Transformation and the Gift of Chinese Development named a Foreign Affairs best book of 2014 on Asia and the Pacific.
- Ian writes about the political impacts of Chinese tourism to Taiwan and Hong Kong.BBC article in Chinese
- Ian compares and contrasts spatial organization, tactics, and daily life in the Hong Kong Umbrella and Taiwan Sunflower Movements.New Bloom interview
- Ian's piece discusses researcher risk and positionality in the context of his participant-observation of the Taiwan Sunflower and Hong Kong Umbrella Movements.
- Western U.S. forests killed by the mountain pine beetle epidemic are no more at risk to burn than healthy Western forests, according to new findings by the °µÍø½ûÇø that fly in the face of both public perception and policy.The
- Julia has received a Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement award from the National Science Foundation. This grant will support her research on "Avian Community Response to Broad-Scale Ecological Disturbances Across Spruce-Fir Forests".
- Ian Rowen quoted by the BBC about the backlash against Chinese touristsRead BBC article
- Bryan Hankinson, a fall 2014 CU-Boulder student who graduated magna cum laude in Geography, developed his honors thesis by investigating the relationship between an increase in spruce bark beetle population and a decrease in American red squirrel