管家婆免费开奖大全

School of the Environment to showcase undergrads' work at annual Research Day

(Photo courtesy of NASA Johnson, CC BY-NC 2.0)

This year鈥檚 Research Day, an annual event put on by the 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 School of the Environment, will, for the first time, showcase the environmentally-focused work of undergraduates in addition to that conducted by the school鈥檚 faculty and graduate students.  

鈥淲e鈥檝e always had undergraduate students work with our professors but we've never really had a way of showing off what they do 鈥 until this year,鈥 says Steve Easterbrook, director of the school and a professor in the department of computer science.

, which coincides with Earth Day, is free and open to the public. It includes keynote presentations as well as breakout rooms in which participants can listen to and interact with presenters. Part of the Faculty of Arts & Science, the School of the Environment is an interdisciplinary hub for education and scholarship on the environment and sustainability. 

Among the students showcasing their work at this year鈥檚 event is Minsheng Hung, a second-year physics and immunology student at Trinity College. 

Hung examined the feasibility of augmenting the solar-generated energy outlined in 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Low Carbon Action Plan with battery storage systems. Because solar is an intermittent energy source and battery systems can store excess generated electricity and discharge it when needed, the systems have the potential to reduce the waste of surplus electricity generated when the sun is shining. 

Graduate students participating in the event include Angela Day, a PhD student in the department of geography and planning. Day studies the ways that resource extraction and environmental decision-making intersect with gender and violence in the ancestral and unceded territories of the Mi鈥檏maq and Wolastoqey nations.

She will describe how, for a proposed mining project in New Brunswick, gender was considered in the environmental assessment process, and how the environmental assessment process implicated health, well-being and settler-Indigenous relations. 

Attendees will also be able to hear about research conducted by 管家婆免费开奖大全 faculty. 

Njal Rollinson is an assistant professor at the school and in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology. He will kick off the day with a keynote talk describing his research into cold-blooded amphibians and reptiles 鈥 such as salamanders and snapping turtles 鈥 in Algonquin Park. Rollinson鈥檚 research suggests the creatures are not responding to climate change as expected.

Jessica Green, an associate professor at the school and in the department of political science will end the day with a talk titled 鈥淭he Existential Politics of Climate Change.鈥 Green鈥檚 research focus is on the politics of decarbonization, transnational private regulation and the interactions between public and private regulation. She is the author of Rethinking Private Authority: Agents and Entrepreneurs in Global Environmental Governance. Other research topics explored during the event reflect the diverse and interdisciplinary nature of the school, including:  

  • the animal-industrial complex and the politics of resistance 
  • the accumulation of chemicals from the air in air-breathing organisms
  • the dynamics of deforestation in areas undergoing shifting 鈥 or slash-and-burn 鈥 cultivation
  • a study of faith-based environmentalism delivered by faith leaders in Canada. 

鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to this year鈥檚 event very much,鈥 says Easterbrook. 鈥淓ven before I became the school鈥檚 director, I would attend Research Day. I always enjoyed the diverse and thought-provoking talks 鈥 and I always learned a lot.鈥 

Arts & Science