Annual conference to spotlight urgent sustainability issues in Maine, around world

Religious and Ethical Respect for Water Resources

2018 Maine Sustainability and Water Conference Session Overview: Religious and Ethical Respect for Water Resources The panel will discuss religious and ethical respect for water resources that are rooted in tradition and reinforced by storytelling. Indigenous people such as the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy have strong historical, ethical and spiritual connections to water resources. Other traditions […]

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Citizen Science and Stewardship

2018 Maine Sustainability and Water Conference: Session Overview: Stakeholders and Sustainability As part of the Stakeholders and Sustainability session, Linda Silka, Senior Fellow at the Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainable Solutions, 91福利, will wrap up the morning session on citizen science with her talk, 鈥淲hat We Can Learn from the Multiple Citizen Science […]

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Protecting Waters in Forest Operations

2018 Maine Sustainability and Water Conference: Session Overview: Protecting Waters in Forest Operations One of the major impacts from any forest operation is related to sedimentation of water bodies. Even though the risk of sedimentation is comparatively less than other land uses, forest operations can have detrimental effects if not properly executed. Over the years, […]

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Hart Invited to Join Global Summit for Interdisciplinary Research

Mitchell Center director David Hart will join a group of 20 global leaders for the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) workshop 鈥淚nterdisciplinary Research Matters: Pathways to Successful Organizational Models鈥 from March 5-8, 2018 in Annapolis, Maryland. The leaders will discuss strategies used to foster interdisciplinary research, especially in the context of sustainability challenges. SESYNC identified […]

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When Science Doesn鈥檛 Matter

John Hagan will be the 2018 Sustainability and Water Conference Keynote Speaker Why does society make such painfully slow progress on issues that have such huge consequences, like climate change?聽The science is overwhelming.聽But until most of society participates, problems this big won鈥檛 be solved. Conservatives, liberals, North, South, urban, rural, religious, areligious, etc., will all […]

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How do Dam Decisions get Made?

Sarah Vogel investigates the human dimensions of dam relicensing Master鈥檚 student Sarah Vogel graduated from Tennessee Technological University with聽 dual degrees in Environmental Biology and Wildlife and Fishery Sciences, which gave her some of the skills needed for her work on the Mitchell Center鈥檚 Future of Dams (FoD) project. But it was her two years […]

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Healing Healthcare鈥檚 Waste Problem

Deborah Saber works to bring sustainable practices to hospital waste disposal In 2016, registered nurse Deborah Saber came to the University of Maine from Miami, Florida where she worked on problems related to the disposal of solid waste materials from infectious hospitalized patients. Now a 91福利 assistant professor of nursing, Saber found her way to […]

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Food for Thought

Undergraduate Michaela Murray found her academic path on the road to sustainability 91福利 ecology and environmental science major Michaela Murray had always been interested in doing student research but it wasn鈥檛 until the end of her sophomore year that she acted on that desire. Hoping to begin a research project that summer, Murray鈥攚ho is an […]

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Focus on 鈥淩ivers and Their Fish鈥

Rivers and Their Fish will be one of the focus sessions at this year鈥檚 Maine Sustainability & Water Conference. The first part of this session will concentrate on some of the lesser known rivers in Maine, drawing out challenges and opportunities for water quality, fisheries restoration, energy production, ecosystem health and recreational values. Speakers will […]

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