The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Environmental policy Events

Pollution, Human Health and Public Policy: A Talk by Yale Environmental Health Expert

Yale University environmental health professor Michelle Bell will speak about how air pollution affects human health during a lecture and webinar on Friday, April 26 at 10 a.m.

Bell’s presentation, titled “The Impact of Airborne Particulate Matter on Human Health: Current Scientific Evidence and Remaining Challenges,” will highlight recent scientific evidence from epidemiological studies on how particles affect human health, using national datasets related to weather, air pollution and health. This talk will be presented in Auditorium 119 in the UMass Amherst Engineering Lab II. It will simultaneously be offered as a webinar.

Particulate matter is estimated to cause more than 3.7 million deaths a year worldwide. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimated that benefits of the Clean Air Act were more than 30 times higher than costs, with a large portion of those benefits from averted mortalities due to decreased levels of particulate matter. Still, more than 74 million people in the U.S. live in areas with higher particulate matter levels than health regulations allow. While there is strong and consistent evidence that particulate matter affects health, many questions remain, such as which types of particles and sources of particles are most harmful; which populations are most susceptible or vulnerable; and how these health impacts will be affected by climate change.

Bell teaches in Yale’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. She researches the impact that atmospheric systems, including pollution and weather, have on human health. Bell intends for her research to be relevant to public policymakers and hopes that her work can contribute to constructive decision-making to better protect human health. She has won several awards, including the National Institute of Environmental Health Science’s Outstanding New Environmental Scientist award in 2006.

This event is co-sponsored by the Northeastern Climate Science Consortium; the Environmental Working Group; and the Center for Public Policy and Administration.

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Events Science, technology & society

Knowledge Commons Leads Discussion about Open-Access Regulations and Academic Research

These days everyone from private funders to government agencies seems to be considering how to ensure that research — and data — is openly accessible. For example, the White House has mandated open access for federal agencies, and in Great Britain, all publicly funded scientific research now must be freely accessible to all.

Next Wednesday, April 3, the University of Massachusetts Amherst Workshop in the Study of Knowledge Commons is hosting a brown bag discussion titled “WHOA! How the White House Open Access Directive Will Affect You.” This session will help members of the university community understand the impact these recent regulatory changes will have on their academic research and publication. Laura Quilter, a copyright attorney and librarian at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library’s Scholarly Communication Office, will lead the discussion at noon in the Teaching Commons room on the 26th floor of the Du Bois Library.

The Workshop in the Study of Knowledge Commons is a non-hierarchical group of UMass faculty, staff and students that meets informally and regularly to work collaboratively to discuss and conduct research on new models for production and sharing of information that can feed humanity’s “knowledge.” This interest is fueled by the ease with which we now can collaborate globally, thanks to Internet-based technologies, on such endeavors as open-access information and media; crowd-sourced systems of production; open-education initiatives; open-source software systems; and open-source hardware.

For more information about this event or the Knowledge Commons, email Associate Professor Charles Schweik.

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Events Faculty Research

April 17 Party to Recognize New Book Exploring Innovative Participatory Research Methods

The Center for Public Policy and Administration is pleased to host a book launch party to celebrate the publication of Participatory Visual and Digital Methods, by Associate Professor Krista Harper (anthropology and public policy) and Assistant Professor Aline Gubrium (public health). The event will take place on Wednesday, April 17 at 5 p.m. in the Gordon Hall Atrium.

Participatory Visual and Digital Methods is Harper’s second book. In it, she and Gubrium describe how to conduct an ethnographic study that engages subjects by using visual and digital methodologies. This new volume shows how technologies such as PhotoVoice, digital storytelling, geographic information systems, digital archives, and film and video can dramatically change the traditional relationship between academic researchers and the community. Harper and Gubrium argue that by using participatory technology and methods, the research process can be more democratic, inclusive and visually appealing.

Harper is an ethnographer, exploring issues related to the cultural politics of the environment, cities and food systems. She has led projects using participatory digital research methods to study environmental issues in a Hungarian Roma neighborhood, school food programs with youth in western Massachusetts, and civic organizations working on urban gardens and heritage preservation both nationally and globally. Harper is currently co-directing a project funded by the National Science Foundation titled Cultural Heritage in European Societies and Spaces. Her previous book, Wild Capitalism: Environmental Activists and Post-socialist Political Ecology in Hungary, explores environmental issues in 21st century Europe.

Gubrium uses participatory, digital visual and narrative research methods to study the sexual and reproductive health knowledge and decision-making of marginalized women and youth. She uses digital storytelling to engage research participants — including African-American women living in a southern rural community and Latino/a youth from Holyoke — in reflecting on sexuality, reproductive health and related aspects of lived experience.

CPPA is the hub for interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Its program is the 2011 recipient of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration’s Social Equity Award, created to honor a public administration, affairs or policy program with a comprehensive approach to integrating social equity into its academic and practical work.

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Events Springfield Initiative

New School’s McGahey to Discuss Economic Development in Declining Regions

The Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA) is honored to host a lecture by The New School’s Rick McGahey on Tuesday, April 9 at 2 p.m. in Gordon Hall 302-304.

In a talk titled “Economic Development Strategy in Declining Regions: Philanthropy, Racial Exclusion, and Economic Equity,” McGahey will explore the case of metropolitan Detroit as he compares different theories of regional development in declining industrial regions. His perspective is especially relevant as CPPA continues its work with the Wellspring Collaborative, an economic development project based in Springfield, Mass., that aims to strengthen the local economy by channeling the purchasing power of the region’s largest employers through new worker-owned businesses in Springfield neighborhoods.

Declining industrial regions face a host of problems, including sprawl, economic loss, fragmented governance, and, in the United States, racial segregation and hostility. As McGahey compares different regional development theories, he will also assess Southeast Michigan’s New Economy Initiative (NEI), a $100 million investment by private philanthropic institutions. NEI was supported by foundations interested in addressing economic inequality and racial segregation, but the resulting grants focus more on generic entrepreneurial development. The analysis suggests that philanthropy is challenged in addressing economic decline and racial divisions, in part because it does not use a specific framework making equity a central aspect of development.

McGahey teaches at the Milano School of International Affairs, Management, and Urban Policy at The New School. He has a Ph.D. in economics from The New School, and has worked extensively in public policy and philanthropy. His public service work includes serving as economic policy advisor to Sen. Edward Kennedy, as executive director of the Congressional Joint Economic Committee, and as assistant secretary for policy at the U.S. Department of Labor. At the Ford Foundation, he was director of impact assessment, and he consults with several foundations on strategy assessment.

CPPA is the hub for interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Its program is the 2011 recipient of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration’s Social Equity Award, created to honor a public administration, affairs or policy program with a comprehensive approach to integrating social equity into its academic and practical work.

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Events

Saunders to Consider Labor in Modern Detroit during Faculty Colloquium

On Monday, April 1, Lisa Saunders will discuss her recent work in a talk titled “Women, Men and Work in Detroit After the Exodus.”

Saunders is an associate professor of economics and also has affiliations with the Labor Studies and Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies programs at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Her research and teaching focus on labor, race and the political economy in the United States.

This lecture is part of the Center for Public Policy and Administration’s spring 2013 Faculty Colloquium series, which consists of informal talks, often about works-in-progress, with presenters providing a significant amount of time for audience discussion and feedback. All talks will be in Thompson 620, from noon to 1 p.m. They are open to the public and brown bag lunches are welcome.

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Environmental policy Events

Union of Concerned Scientists President Visits CPPA

Earlier this week the Center for Public Policy and Administration hosted an informal question-and-answer session with UMass alumnus Kevin Knobloch (’78), president of the Union of Concerned Scientists, and a leader in the environmental policy and advocacy movement.

During an hour-long conversation at Gordon Hall, Knobloch spoke about his work leading the Union of Concerned Scientists, which uses thorough and independent scientific research to offer technical analysis and smart advocacy on a range of issues, including climate change, clean vehicles, and food and agriculture. Knobloch, who studied journalism as an undergraduate at UMass, also spoke about how his previous career as a journalist has helped him craft messages in ways that are relevant to and understood by diverse constituencies.

He was on campus as an Eleanor Bateman Alumni Scholar and also gave a university-wide talk titled “Needed: Skillful Capitalists to Lead us to a Low-Carbon Future.”

CPPA is the hub of interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst.

Categories
Events Social inequality & justice

Social Justice Practitioner Resident to Focus on Women’s Health and Rights in India

Next month, N.B. Sarojini will serve as the Five College Public Policy Initiative’s Spring 2013 Social Justice Practitioner-in-Residence. During her stay from April 8-19, Sarojini will participate in several public events throughout the Five College community.

Sarojini is the founder and director of the Sama Resource Group for Women and Health, a New Delhi-based nonprofit that conducts action research and promotes appropriate health policies around issues ranging from population growth to malaria treatment during pregnancy. She has been advocating for women’s rights and their health care for two decades. As Sama’s director, she has coordinated national research studies concerning the potential impacts on women of reproductive and medical technologies, the implications of the two-child norm for marginalized communities, and alternative systems of medicine. Sarojini also serves on the steering committee for India’s Health Care Planning Commission, is a joint convener of India’s chapter of the People’s Health Movement, and is an organizing committee member of India’s National Bioethics Conference.

Her residency this spring marks the third of the Social Justice Practitioner-in-Residence Program. This collaborative Five College project is housed administratively at the Center for Public Policy and Administration (CPPA). It was created to offer Five College students and faculty opportunities to engage with and learn from individuals who have hands-on policymaking experience. By offering occasions to interact with those who have chosen lives of service, the residency program helps students imagine careers of their own that might advance the common good.

In addition to the public events listed below, Sarojini will speak at several classes and participate in some informal workshops during her residency. For a full list of Sarojini’s events that are open to the public, click here.

  • Wednesday, April 10 at 7 p.m.
    Systemic Violence or Informed Consent? The Feminist Politics of New Reproductive Technologies and Medical Experimentation in India (public talk)
    Campus Center Reading Room, UMass Amherst
  • Saturday, April 13 at 1:15 p.m.
    International Roundtable: Feminism and Reproductive Rights
    Franklin Patterson Hall 108, Hampshire College
  • Saturday, April 13 at 5:15 p.m.
    New Horizons in Reproductive Politics (public talk)
    Franklin Patterson Hall 106, Hampshire College
  • Sunday, April 14 at 11 a.m.
    Plenary Address at Civil Liberties and Public Policy Conference: From Abortion Rights to Social Justice
    Franklin Patterson Hall, Hampshire College
  • Wednesday, April 17 at 7 p.m.
    Can We See the Baby Bump Please? Experiences of Surrogacy in Mumbai, India (film and discussion)
    West Lecture Hall, Hampshire College

The Five College Public Policy Initiative aims to enhance collaboration among Five College faculty and students who are interested in curricula, research and outreach related to public policy. The residency program was made possible by a generous grant from Five Colleges, Incorporated.

CPPA is the hub of interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst. Its faculty and alumni are effective policy leaders, from the local to the global levels, in addressing topics such as family and care policy, environmental issues, emerging technologies, social inequalities and governance. The CPPA program is the 2011 recipient of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration’s Social Equity Award, created to honor a public administration, affairs or policy program with a comprehensive approach to integrating social equity into its academic and practical work.

 

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Events

Panelists Offer Perspectives on Local Agriculture Today and Beyond

Professor Eric Decker addresses the audience.

During a panel discussion yesterday titled “Local Food: Cultivating an Economy, an Industry or a Movement?” professors from the UMass Amherst nutrition, food science, and sustainable food and farming programs agreed that the demand for locally grown foods is on the rise. But they offered different perspectives on the significance behind that fact.

The event was hosted by the Food Access Research and Engagement (FARE) Partnership, a campus group that aims to serve as a bridge between the university and the broader community, linking the teaching and research capacity of the University of Massachusetts Amherst with diverse community partners and decision-makers.

In a lively conversation before a packed room, Nancy Cohen, professor and head of the Nutrition Department, peppered her remarks with data suggesting that all the buzz about local food might actually be starting to improve how we eat. Over the last 10 years, Cohen said, the number of farmers’ markets has doubled and the number of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) operations has tripled. “I think that these things are here to stay,” she added.

From a nutrition standpoint, that’s a good thing. Cohen cited statistics showing that CSA members are more likely to eat the USDA’s recommended daily servings of fruits and vegetables than are their neighbors who don’t own a farm share. That obesity and the average caloric intake among children in the United States both leveled out in 2010 suggests that the increased focus on eating good, healthy foods — including locally grown fruits and vegetables — is starting to have a real impact on our country’s diet.

But we need deep, systemic nationwide changes in our funding priorities if we hope to build on these successes, said Eric Decker, head of the Food Science Department. “Everybody likes to blame foods for all our health problems in the U.S.,” said Decker. “We don’t look at food as a preventative medicine.”

As long as only .04 percent of all research dollars in this country go toward studying food and nutrition, we’re unlikely to make many food-related health breakthroughs. And as long as our agricultural subsidies go toward crops such as corn and soy that are used as animal feed, rather than toward fruits and vegetables that humans eat, farmers won’t have an incentive to grow more and higher-quality produce.

The problem is, though, the world actually needs more fruits and vegetables in order to feed the ever-growing global population, which topped 7 billion last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. “In the next 40 years, we will need to produce as much food as we have in the whole history of the world,” Decker said.

John Gerber, professor of sustainable food and farming, not only believes humanity is up to this challenge. He also believes we have a responsibility to feed the globe’s citizens with food that is healthy for humans to eat in such a way that is also healthy for the environment.

The development of regional food hubs was one suggestion he had for increasing the production and improving the distribution of locally grown food. By aggregating the means of production and distribution, the local food system would function more efficiently, Gerber said.

Until relatively recently, we have fed people across the world without simultaneously hurting the planet. And Gerber believes we can do so again. “This problem is mind-made,” he said. “And if it’s mind-made, it can be mind-changed.”

The Center for Public Policy and Administration coordinated this panel for the FARE Partnership. CPPA is the hub of interdisciplinary public policy research, teaching and engagement at UMass Amherst.

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Alumni news Environmental policy Events

Environmental Policy Guru Knobloch to Meet with CPPA Students

On Monday, March 11, CPPA faculty and students have the opportunity to meet UMass alumnus Kevin Knobloch (’78), president of the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) since 2003. This reception is a rare opportunity to talk and network with one of the leaders of the environmental movement. The informal reception will include light refreshments and will take place in Gordon Hall 302 at 2:30 p.m.

This veteran leader in the environmental policy community holds more than 30 years of experience in U.S. government and media advocacy. He has led several UCS delegations to the United Nations International Climate negotiations and currently oversees all UCS programs and operations. After starting his career as a newspaper reporter in Massachusetts, Knobloch worked on Capitol Hill as a press secretary, legislative assistant and then legislative director. He then became director of conservation programs for the Appalachian Mountain Club in Boston and co-founded the Arlington (MA) Land Trust.

Knobloch earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from UMass Amherst. He holds a master’s degree in public administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, with a focus on natural resource economics and environmental management.

On Tuesday, March 12, Knobloch will present a public lecture hosted by the Alumni Association titled “Needed: Skillful Capitalists to Lead us to a Low-Carbon Future.” Goodell Hall, 4 p.m.

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Events

Brabec to Discuss Gullah Land Use in Faculty Colloquium

On March 4, Elizabeth Brabec will discuss her recent work in a talk titled “Commonage in Private Holdings: Land Use and Land Ownership in the Gullah Communities of South Carolina.”

Brabec is a professor of landscape architecture and regional planning. Her research focuses on land conservation and the design and planning of sustainable open space, complemented with a strong interest in culture and the historical basis of landscape form.

This lecture is part of CPPA’s spring 2013 Faculty Colloquium series, which consists of informal talks, often about works-in-progress, with presenters providing a significant amount of time for audience discussion and feedback. All talks will be in Thompson 620, from noon to 1 p.m. They are open to the public and brown bag lunches are welcome.