LECTURE: Science and Civic Engagement

Thomas Sisk, Conservation Biologist

Posted on behalf of Green College

Thomas Sisk, our very first Cecil H. and Ida Green Visiting Professor of the year, will be giving his opening lecture tomorrow (Sept.28)!

About the lecture

“Science and Civic Engagement:
Crossing Scales and Jurisdictions for Biodiversity Conservation.”

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Time: 4:30 – 6:00 p.m. Tuesday Sept. 28, 2010
Place: The Liu Institute for Global Issues

Abstract: Science has great potential to inform and engage the public in a manner that facilitates and elevates deliberative approaches to environmental management. Too often, however, its role in policy development is limited to either supporting or undermining established policy positions, further marginalizing nontechnical participants from the decision process. Meaningful engagement of the public in environmental policy and management can be facilitated by participatory science that brings diverse values and perspectives into focus and empowers the deeper involvement of knowledgeable nonscientists.

Drawing on ecological research conducted within a frame of collaborative approaches to public lands management, Thomas Sisk will discuss the emerging role of environmental science in shaping the context for policy deliberations and explore how this relates to its more traditional role of information provider.

Examples from bold forest and rangeland conservation efforts spanning over a million ha of the Grand Canyon region, USA, illustrate how scientific engagement might move beyond expert opinion and toward a more inclusive approach, where science empowers democratic processes for resolving contested public policy and guiding management of commonly held lands and resources.

About the speaker

Tom Sisk is a conservation biologist working at the interface of environmental science and policy. His practice combines landscape analysis with collaborative approaches to the management of public land and natural resources.

By developing participatory approaches that incorporate diverse constituencies into both science and planning, he and his colleagues are pioneering new approaches to the conservation and management of the commons. Tom’s scholarship is interdisciplinary, ranging from primary research in ecology, including the population biology of birds and butterflies, to the application of spatial analysis in fostering civic engagement in policy development (see the Featured CIGVP page for full bio).

He is a fellow of the Aldo Leopold Leadership Program and a Cecil H. and Ida Green Visiting Professor at UBC over the 2010/11 academic year, where he is affiliated with Green College and the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability.

An invitation!

After the lecture, Green College is hosting a reception for Tom in the Green College Piano Lounge.

If you attend either the lecture beforehand or the fireside chat (in Green College’s Graham House at 8 p.m.), you’re also invited to the reception… at which, we should mention, there will be ample food and drink.

Eco expert Candis Callison from MIT to lecture at Green College

By Fabiola Carletti Graduate student at the UBC School of Journalism and Green College resident


My thesis supervisor is really smart. No, like, really smart.
Not to mention down-to-earth, incisive and articulate.

Her name is Candis Callison and on Oct. 7th she’s going to make Green College a little more green-minded with her  lecture: “Spinning climate change, vernaculars and emergent forms of life.”

About the Lecture

When: Thursday, October 7, 2010 5-6:30 pm
Where: Green College Coach House

Abstract: It has often been asserted as a democratic and scientific ideal that the discovery of objective facts and the dissemination of such information will drive action. But the line between what Bruno Latour calls matters of fact and matters of concern is anything but straightforward, and more often than not includes traversing not only the vagaries of media channels for mass communication, but also a diversity of meaning-making, ethics, and morality.

This talk will present research on such processes, providing insight into how Americans in various social and professional groups are translating, transforming, and re-articulating climate change for diverse constituents and wider publics.

About the speaker

Candis is graduate of the Comparative Media Studies Program at the MIT, where she earned her Master of Science. She’s currently working on her Ph.D. in MIT’s Science, Technology, and Society program.

As a journalist, she has worked for a variety of media outlets, including the CBC, CTV, and the APTN (Aboriginal Peoples Television Network).

In addition to her Ph.D. work, Candis lectures at the UBC School of Journalism and is raising two young daughters with her partner in Vancouver.

An invitation!

If you’re in the Vancouver area, and you’re curious about Green College–an interdisciplinary  graduate residence and frequent lecture venue–there’s no better time to visit than for Candis’ upcoming talk. Come for the love of learning and stay for the deliciousness of dinner. UBC students ($15) and members of the general public ($18) can purchase a three-course dinner ticket in advance or pay an extra toonie to simply walk in and join us on the day of the event.

We hope to see you soon!

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