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RESEARCH

The ֱ Strategic Initiative on Climate, Justice and Sustainability (SICJS) fosters sustainability research and teaching across all disciplines and all six colleges at the University.
 

SOCIAL RELATIONS AND CULTURAL PRACTICES AROUND "GARBAGE"

aerial view of vast garbage collecting and sorting

Project Lead: Agnese Codebò, PhD, Assistant Professor in the Department of Spanish

2024-25 SICJS Faculty Fellow Agnese Codebò, PhD, Assistant Professor in the Department of Spanish, will use her Fellowship award to further her investigation of the social relations and cultural practices around “garbage” in Argentina and Brazil and explore the question of how garbage matters culturally and socially in these countries. Her work challenges the dominant narratives that portray waste as undesirable and useless and instead looks to culture, activism and urban space to show how these cultures coexist with waste despite our environmental crises.

      

BROADENING DIVERSITY IN THE ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES THROUGH A HIGH SCHOOL RESEARCH EXPERIENCE

students taking core soil samples

Project: Broadening Diversity in the Environmental Sciences Through a High School Environmental Justice Focused Research Experience

Project Lead: Steven Goldsmith, PhD, associate Professor, Geography and the Environment

Urban communities often suffer the greatest damage from poor water, air, and soil quality. Geoscience programs, including the environmental sciences, are the foundation for jobs tasked with remedying these problems; however, the racially minoritized residents who disproportionately experience environmental burdens are vastly underrepresented in these fields. 

This partnership with Walter B. Saul High School in Philadelphia uses and immersive, locally based, culturally responsive research experience in urban environmental geochemistry, through an environmental justice lens, to broaden a pathway to the geosciences for underrepresented minoritized students.  Students are engaged though both school-based active learning modules and a solutions-based summer research experience carried out alongside ֱ undergraduate students.  

     

REVOLUTIONIZING SUSTAINABLE AND FAIR GREEN STORMWATER INFRASTRUCTURE THROUGH AI

Stormwater-Project

Research team: Dr. Virginia Smith (CEE-VCRWS), Dr. Xun Jiao (ECE), Dr. Bridget Wadzuk (CEE-VCRWS), Dr. Peleg Kremer (GEV)

Goals: Leverage novel datasets and AI technology to deepen understanding of green stormwater infrastructure (GSI) dynamics to impact infrastructure planning, development, and management

Impact: An interdisciplinary approach to mitigating the effects of urbanization and climate change while addressing issues of social equity in urban infrastructure.

The last five years were the hottest years on record further complicating flooding, which has an annual cost of $2.9 billion.

       

ECOLOGICAL AND INDIGENOUS ETHICS

Ecological-Indigenous-Ethics-Project

Research team: Dr. Paul Rosier, Mary M. Birle Chair in American History

Proposed Research Project: “Indigenous Ecological Ethics in an Age of Environmental Crisis: Native People’s Engagement with Climate Change and the Implications for a Sustainable Future.” A scholarly history of the engagement of North American native peoples in the environmental movement.

Dr. Rosier is the winner of the 2013 Veritas Award for Research Excellence and the Labriola Center American Indian National Book Award (for Serving Their Country: American Indian Politics and Patriotism in the Twentieth Century, Harvard UP, 2010).

His previous publications include:

  • “Surviving in the 20th Century, 1890-1960,” in Oxford Handbook of American Indian History, Ed. Frederick E. Hoxie (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016).
  • "Crossing New International and Historiographical Boundaries: American Indians and Twentieth Century American Foreign Policy," Diplomatic History 39 (October 2015): 955-966.
  • Sylvia Washington, Paul C. Rosier, and Heather Goodall, eds. Echoes from the Poisoned Well: Global Memories of Environmental Injustice. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006.
  • Native American Issues. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2003.
  • Rebirth of the Blackfeet Nation, 1912-1954. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2001.

      

CAMPUS LIVING LABORATORY FOR CLIMATE IMPACT AND SUSTAINABLE PROCESSES AND PRACTICES

ֱ-Campus-Aerial

Opportunity: The ֱ campus is a microcosm of a community of people utilizing infrastructure to enable productive and meaningful lives

Goal: Use the campus as a Living Laboratory allowing Institute researchers to conduct studies with data from people, buildings, grounds, and facilities

  • Assessment of the University’s Climate Footprint and its reduction
  • Stormwater and mitigation of climate-accelerated flooding
  • Examining Campus Biodiversity and the impact of climate

      

DEVELOPING A CASE DEFINITION OF CLIMATE CHANGE-RELATED MORTALITY 

climate-change-mortality-project

Research team: Ruth McDermott-Levy, PhD, RN, MPH, FAAN (FCN), Madeline Scolio (VURF, CLAS ‘23), Kabindra Shakya, PhD (GEV) & Caroline Moore (FCN, PhD student)

Goal: Conduct a systematic review of the scientific literature to develop a case definition of climate change-related mortality.

Impact: Definition will be used to review Pennsylvania Dept of Health mortality data to identify and quantify climate change-related mortality in the Commonwealth.  This will serve as a pilot for a national climate mortality study. 

Strategic Initiative for Climate, Justice and Sustainability
ֱ University
800 Lancaster Avenue
ֱ, PA 19085

     

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