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Hot Science, Cool Talks: Cultivating Science and Environmental Justice

December 4, 2020 @ 7:00 pm - 7:40 pm

Basic Info

Date:
December 4, 2020
Time:
7:00 pm - 7:40 pm
Event Website / RSVP:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cultivating-science-and-environmental-justice-registration-129729904637

Who's Hosting This Event?

University of Texas Environmental Science Institute
Who We Are:

The Environmental Science Institute was founded by The University of Texas at Austin as a multi-disciplinary institute for basic scientific research in environmental studies. The Institute serves as a focal point on campus for a wide scope of interdisciplinary research and teaching involving the complex interactions of the biosphere, hydrosphere, and lithosphere in the Earth system, as well as the human dimensions of these interactions.

View Organizer Website
Cultivating Science and Environmental Justice
Event Category:

Other

Event Topics
Equality/Justice
Event Tags:
,

Join us for a Hot Science – Cool Talks event from the comfort of your home with Dr. Monica Ramirez-Andreotta!

With more than 355,000 hazardous waste sites and 550,000 abandoned mines in the U.S., it is not uncommon to find residential areas located next to them.  Discover how Dr. Monica Ramirez-Andreotta engaged affected communities using gardens and citizen science. Community members investigated and evaluated the contaminants in their areas while cultivating gardens to improve the environmental health of their neighborhoods.

Monica Ramirez-Andreotta is an assistant professor of Environmental Science with a joint appointment in the College of Public Health at the University of Arizona. As the Director of Project Harvest and Gardenroots, she is building citizen science programs to increase public participation in environmental health research, developing low-cost environmental monitoring tools to improve exposure estimates, and designing effective risk communication and data report-back strategies to improve environmental health literacy. Dr. Ramirez-Andreotta’s philosophy is that to successfully engage communities and students, it is essential to address critical environmental health problems identified by the community, and then work collaboratively through the problem-solving and research process.

Venue

Online