
North American species are disappearing at an alarming rate. Some are well-known like the grizzly bear and the California condor. But many more, such as the bog turtle or Santa Catalina Island fox, are less familiar though equally threatened and critical to their habitats. A series of portraits on plain backgrounds gives equal weight to each. The back-lit photographs displayed on the Museum’s exterior show the beauty, grace, and value in every species.
Of the world’s 6.5 billion people, 5.8 billion, or ninety percent, often lack the means to purchase even the most basic goods. Design for the Other 90% explores a growing movement to design low-cost solutions for those not traditionally served by professional designers. Entrepreneurs, engineers, students, professors, and architects from around the globe are devising cost-effective ways to improve access to water, food, energy, education, healthcare, revenue-generating activities, and affordable transportation. This exhibition demonstrates how design can be a dynamic force in saving and transforming lives, at home and around the world.
The Museum and the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon reveal conceptual designs for twenty collegiate teams selected to appear in the 2011 competition. From now until the event opens on the National Mall in fall 2011, teams will transform these ideas into real solar-powered houses that are affordable, energy efficient, and attractive.
Wounded Splendor is co-commissioned by the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $37/$9 for students
Inspired by the growing environmental crisis and a life-long love of the outdoors, David and his collaborators have created a choreographed suite of poetry, monologues and dance accompanied by an original musical score and set within a luscious video design. Image and lyric, awe and fury are juxtaposed to spark deeper contemplation of our suffering planet, our capacity for reverence and our exceptional ability to destroy — and to save.
Sponsor: Dining Services and the Office of Sustainability
Rain barrels capture water, slowing the flow of water off roofs, which reduces erosion and the sediment loading of creeks and streams. They also provide free water for gardens and lawns. Learn how to make a rain barrel using a recycled Pepsi syrup barrel and a few basic supplies. Participants are asked to pay $25 for supplies and will take home their very own rain barrel! Space is limited; RSVP to earthmonthUMD@gmail.com.
Sponsor: Ecological Economics Student Groups (EESG)
Join EESG to hear a lecture by Dr. Jennifer Turner, the Director of the China Environment Forum at the Woodrow Wilson Center. She will present on China's environment, discussing issues such as desertification and other environmental issues where economics play a significant role.
Sponsor: UMD for Clean Energy
Speakers from several non-profits talk about the harmful practice of mountain top removal coal mining and what can be done to put a stop to it.
Sponsor: Smith School of Business
Calvert is a leader in sustainable and responsible investing, managing over $14 billion in assets. In addition to strong performance in the marketplace, Calvert is recognized as a “Great Place to Work” and an “Eco Leader” by the Alliance for Workplace Excellence. Join the Smith School for April’s CEO@Smith lecture to learn more about Barbara Krumsiek’s leadership at the Bethesda-based Calvert Group.
Sponsor: The Office of Sustainability
Join a discussion with your faculty colleagues about integrating sustainability across the curriculum. RSVP by April 21 to stewartm@umd.edu. Lunch will be provided.
Sponsor: Beyond the Classroom
In February 2004, the world witnessed the largest mobilization of people in history to speak with one message: do not invade Iraq. Although record-breaking, the demonstrations were not enough to stop the United States from invading Iraq. The peace movement, at its greatest moment, had failed. In response to this challenge, the inaugural World Peace Forum was held for six days in June 2006 in Vancouver, Canada. Five thousand delegates mobilized from over 90 countries to do no less than revise the paradigm of peace and take the steps necessary to create a world without war. Think Peace follows a group of citizen journalists as they seek out leading civil society activists, diplomats, scholars, and artists who could describe the challenges facing one of the world’s largest social movements.
Hundreds of events! Be sure to check out these:
Sponsor: UMD for Clean Energy
UMD for Clean Energy hosts Senator Ben Cardin for a town hall style meeting about clean energy and federal climate legislation!
Tour Knight Hall, the University’s first LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design from the U.S. Green Building Council) certified building on the College Park Campus. A tour of the building will occur twice, once at 11 am and again at 1 pm. Meet in the great hall near the café. No reservation required.
Sponsors: A. James Clark School of Engineering and the Office of Sustainability
This year’s event will explore opportunities and challenges in water sustainability at the national and regional levels (including availability, management, purity, and wastewater management) and the roles engineers and others can play. The workshop offers presentations, demonstrations, and discussions in which all may participate. At the conclusion of the day, workshop participants will view student videos presenting ideas for how to reduce the Clark School’s water footprint (and its carbon footprint) by improving the water supply and consumption of its buildings, laboratories, and grounds. Click here for details on the student video competition.
Co-Sponsors: Division of Student Affairs Sustainability Committee and Student Entertainment Events (SEE)
This event is FREE, including FREE popcorn! Also, the first 75 people will receive a reusable Film Festival shopping bag!
The Chevrolet Volt, an extended-range electric vehicle slated for production this coming November, is coming to the University of Maryland as part of the campus’ Earth Month activities. The visit includes a presentation from faculty and Chevrolet about automotive advances helpful to the environment and campus sustainability efforts. Five students and three faculty/staff members attending the presentation will have an opportunity to win a drive in the Volt. Presenters include Dr. Eric Wachsman, Director of the University of Maryland Energy Research Center (UMERC); Dr. David Kirsch, Associate Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship in the Smith School of Business; and Chevrolet Product Specialists. Lunch will be provided.
Join the UMD community on Tuesday, April 20th, for the first ever on-campus Farmers Market! Come out (rain or shine) for food, art, jewelry, live music, and more. Participating local vendors include: Three Springs Fruit Farm, Groff's Content Farm, Stone Hearth Bakery, Zeke's Coffee, Mystic Water Soap, Migue's Magnificent Mini-Donuts, Ruben's Crepes, and Locust Point Greenhouse. There will also be student music & comedy and art for sale.
The Student Government Association's Earth Day Planning Committee invites you to join us for the University of Maryland's “Other Mother's Day” Annual Earth Day Celebration. Over 50 student groups, university departments, and environmentally-responsible businesses and organizations from around the community will be present to help celebrate the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. If your organization would like to exhibit on the mall, please email kmmgreen@gmail.com by Friday April 16th to reserve a table for your organization.
Sponsor: VegTerps, Terps for Animal Welfare and the SGA Student Sustainability Committee
In celebration of Earth MONTH, VegTerps, Terps for Animal Welfare and the Student Sustainability Committee is proud to have Gene Baur on campus, one of the leading animal rights activist since Farm Sanctuary began in 1986. Baur is the President and Co-founder of Farm Sanctuary, the first animal rescue organization for farmed animals. Meet Gene Baur and hear him speak about his national best-seller Farm Sanctuary: Changing Hearts and Minds about Animals and Food. Gene's book will be also be available for sale and he will sign copies! The event is free and open to the general public.
Sponsor: Beyond the Classroom
Winner of the Academy Award for Best Documentary, The Cove tells one of the most intriguing true stories of our time. When an elite team of activists, filmmakers and free divers embark on a covert mission to penetrate a remote and hidden cove in Japan, they shine a light on a dark and deadly secret. This unforgettable story about the industrial practices of Japan’s fishing industry has inspired audiences around the world to action and raised hopes that thousands of the most magnificent wild animals on Earth – dolphins – can be saved!
Sponsor: Ecological Economics Student Group (EESG)
Join EESG to hear a lecture delivered by Ryan Richards, a graduate student in the public policy/conservation biology dual masters program. He will be speaking on using bioenergy to fuel habitat restoration on farmland in Namibia.
Sponsor: UMD for Clean Energy
Several University of Maryland Alumni are walking across the country picking up trash and advocating for environmental awareness. On the way, they are stopping in College Park to play some music and talk about moving toward a culture of sustainability!
Sponsor: Residential Facilities and Community Service Learning (Center for Campus Life)
Help remove, obliterate, eradicate, and eliminate invasive weeds from campus rain gardens. Come dressed for the weather in light-colored clothing that will get dirty and protective shoes/boots that will get wet. Gloves, insect repellent, information, and water will be provided. Rain date is April 16. *THIS EVENT IS OPEN TO STUDENT AFFAIRS EMPLOYEES ONLY*. For more information, contact garcia@umd.edu.
Come learn from faculty colleagues how they connect civic engagement and sustainability in courses across the curriculum. How do these concepts apply across disciplines? What do they really look like in the curriculum? What have faculty members learned in the process? Panelists will be faculty members involved in the Chesapeake Project and I-Courses. Please RSVP to cte@umd.edu so we can plan for lunch.
Sponsor: Voices of Social Change Program
Come and learn about issues of environmental justice in the surrounding campus community. Voices of Social Change, a speaker series of engaging storytellers of social change, will feature two panelists. Mayor Ortiz, who has been featured on CNN, will address how he has helped to create change in Edmonston, MD, less than three miles from campus. Mayor Ortiz brought attention to a little known community to create one of the nation's "Greenest Streets". Vinnie Bevivino will talk about issues of food justice and his work in urban farming to empower the local community. They will share personal stories of how to bring positive social change to our community. The Voices of Social Change Program is a collaboration between Leadership & Community Service-Learning in the Adele H. Stamp Student Union Center for Campus Life.
Sponsor: The School of Public Policy
The School of Public Policy's Tuesday Policy Forum will feature Professor Robert H. Nelson speaking on the topic, "Policy Analysis - The Role of Economic Religion and Environmental Religion." Professor Nelson will draw upon his new book, The New Holy Wars: Economic Religion versus Environmental Religion in Contemporary America (Penn State Press, 2010). Nelson first wrote about environmental religion in "Unoriginal Sin: The Judeo-Christian Roots of Ecotheology" in Policy Review (Summer 1990), and have written many subsequent articles and papers on the subject. The New Holy Wars is his first book on the subject. For more information, contact Denise Williamson at 301-405-6334 or rdenise@umd.edu. You can also visit the School of Public Policy’s website at www.publicpolicy.umd.edu.
Sponsor: Initiative on Education for Peace, Cooperation, and Development (IEPCD)
How was the Wooded Hillock saved from development into a parking lot and utility buildings, despite the plans of the Administration? Exploring how to wade through bureaucracy and create peaceful change in a situation fraught with emotion and complications is the topic of April's IEPCD discussion. Professor Marla McIntosh, who spearheaded the effort to have the University of Maryland recognized as an Arboretum and Botanical Garden and who was a passionate supporter of the effort to save the Wooded Hillock, will be the guest speaker. Lunch will be served. Please RSVP to Janet Tunney at jtunney@cidcm.umd.edu
Sponsor: Beyond the Classroom
Oscar-nominated for Best Documentary Feature in 2009, The Garden has been hailed by critics as the most astute and powerful political film of the year. Filmmaker Scott Hamilton Kennedy brilliantly captures, in a series of explosive and wrenching turn of events, the way greedy developers, inept politicians, and self-serving “community” leaders can run roughshod over the lives of working-class families fighting to save the largest urban farm in America – a 14-acre oasis in South Central Los Angeles that was created in the wake of the 1992 L.A. riots. The Garden raises crucial and challenging questions about liberty, equality, and justice for the poorest and most vulnerable among us.
Sponsor: College Park Environmental Group (CPEG)
The College Park Environmental Group (CPEG) is participating in the Alice Ferguson Foundation’s 22nd Annual Potomac River Watershed Clean-up event. There are two sites: Soapstone Valley, Rock Creek Park (RSVP required) and Fort Washington Park (no RSVP needed). To participate, email cpegnews@gmail.com.
Sponsor: MaryPIRG
Come celebrate Earth MONTH and clean, renewable wind energy with MaryPIRG's Global Warming Solutions campaign! Event includes guest speakers, bands, games, crafts, and more. The concert is FREE and no tickets are required! The event will feature Hybrid Rose, Hovercraft, and Garrett. Speakers will include Randy Swisher (Executive Director of American Wind Energy Association) and Mike Sherling (Representative from Environment MD). Student groups attending this event include: Society for Green Businesses, NORML Terps, and UMD for Clean Energy. Come listen to inspiring activists, hear great music, and win cool prizes. It's a great kickoff to Earth month and a fun start for your Friday night!
Sponsor: Ecological Economics Student Group (EESG)
Join EESG and Bob Rice from the Smithsonian Institution in the Migratory Bird Center to learn more about shade grown coffee. This lecture material will compliment “Beyond the Latte” which is held Thursday, April 10, 2010 and sponsored by the Smith School of Business, the Office of Sustainability, and Dining Services.
Sponsor: Smith School of Business Center for Social Value Creation, the Office of Sustainability, and Dining Services
Beyond the Latté will bring together leaders from the coffee industry to discuss the worldwide socio economic and environmental impact of a cup of coffee. The forum will include coffee importers, roasters and NGOs, who will educate students, faculty, and administrators on the coffee value chain, its complex history, the improvements being undertaken, and the chance for a “better” cup of coffee. To register, click here.
Sponsor: Career Center with input from Environmental Science and Policy, Engineering, and the Office of Sustainability
This event is designed to enhance awareness of environmental and sustainability careers and employment opportunities. It will bring together public and private sector organizations, campus student groups and selected university departmental majors whose expertise and interests lie in this area. Come talk with area employers about your career interests and hear recent alumni and hiring managers talk about what it takes to land a sustainability job.
Sponsor: UMD for Clean Energy
East Campus is a big-deal project that will impact the lives of all UMD students. Come learn about how we can make this the smartest, most environmentally sustainable, socially responsible, and economically sound development College Park has ever seen!
Sponsor: Beyond the Classroom
Margaret Keck’s recent book, “Greening Brazil,” co-authored with Kathryn Hochstetler, retells the story of environmentalism in Brazil from the inside out, analyzing the extensive efforts within the country to save its natural environment, and the interplay of those efforts with transnational environmentalism. Greening Brazil presents a multilevel analysis encompassing institutions and individuals within the government—at national, state, and local levels—as well as the activists, interest groups, and nongovernmental organizations that operate outside formal political channels.
Sponsor: Environmental Science and Policy Program
In preparation for the April 8 Environmental and Sustainability Career & Internship Fair, come to a resumé workshop where you will learn how to improve both the content and layout of your resumé. RSVP by sending a copy of your resumé to wwhitte@umd.edu.
Sponsors: Departments of Transportation Services (DOTS), Public Safety, Campus Recreation Services, Student Government Association (SGA), Off-Campus Student Involvement, and the Wellness Initiative
BikeUMD, the Bicycling Program of the University of Maryland, College Park, is planning a Share the Road Campaign the week of April 5th. This is a campus safety campaign to increase motorists' /bicyclists' shared responsibility for road safety. It will also promote the campus bike program and increase awareness of campus bicycling facilities and programs. Events include a bike fair on Monday, April 5 in Hornbake Plaza (10 am – 2 pm), bicycle-themed documentaries in HOFF Theater, bike clinics at Campus Recreation Services, a tree tour of campus (by bike!), and many other exciting events. Click here for a complete calendar.
Sponsor: Ecological Economics Student Group (EESG)
Join EESG and Dr. Karen Lips, Director of the Sustainable Development and Conservation Biology and (CONS) Program, to learn more about the Global Amphibian Crisis. Amphibians are the most endangered taxa in the entire globe, with over 1/3 of all species classified as either threatened or endangered. The interacting threats of climate change, disease, invasive species, habitat loss, pollution, and overharvesting are driving the declines of over 40% of amphibian species. Dr. Karen Lips will summarize the research on these amphibian declines and speak on the importance of amphibians both ecologically and economically.
Colleges and universities have a significant impact on the built and natural environment and are under increasing pressure from governments, students, and community members to carefully mitigate their environmental footprint. This comprehensive symposium features sessions and workshops on smart growth and sustainable practices that serve the economy, the community, and the environment. Topics include institutionalizing sustainability, operational solutions, smart growth and campus planning, and assessment and measurement.
From sustainable food culture to colony collapse disorder to school lunches, the vital connection between food and the environment is a major theme of the 18th annual Environmental Film Festival, to be held March 16-28. Film buffs and environmentally aware citizens will have the opportunity to see 155 documentary, feature, animated, archival, experimental, and children’s films selected to provide fresh, thought-provoking perspectives on environmental issues facing our planet. The festival takes place at 56 venues throughout the city, including museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theaters -- and most of the screenings are free.
BEES Department lecture by Health Lynch of the Biology Department. Coffee, tea, and cookies will be served at 11:30 and attendees are invited to a light lunch after the seminar.
Today's enormous development challenges are complicated by the reality of climate change. Estimates are that developing countries would bear 75-80% of the costs of anticipated damage caused by the changing climate. This talk will explore how to better help people cope with new or worsened risks drawing on the World Development Report 2010 and lessons learned from the U.S. National Assessments. Rosina Bierbaum is the co-director of the World Development Report 2010 on climate change. Since 2001, she has been the Dean and Professor at the School of Natural Resources and Environment (SNRE) at the University of Michigan.
Can working in a green building make you healthier? And if you can prove this, would reduce a company’s health care insurance? Find out if this is a game changer when considering how and when to build sustainably. A discussion with: Gregory Kats, senior director and director of climate change policy, Good Energies, Michelle Moore, Federal Environmental Executive, President’s Council on Environmental Quality, Mark Nicholls, Senior Vice President, Corporate Workplace Executive, Bank of America, Vivian Loftness, Professor, Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture, Moderator, Robert Ivy, Architectural Record Editor-In-Chief.
Ted Glick has devoted 42 years of his life to the progressive social change movement. For the last six years, Ted has played a national leadership role in the effort to stabilize our climate and for a clean energy revolution. He was a co-founder in 2004 of the Climate Crisis Coalition and in 2005 coordinated the USA Join the World effort leading up to December 3rd actions during the United Nations Climate Change conference in Montreal. In May 2006, Ted became the national coordinator of the U.S. Climate Emergency Council and is currently Policy Director for the Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN). For three and a half months in the fall of 2007, he ate no solid food as part of a climate emergency fast focused on getting Congress to pass strong climate legislation. Come hear how Gandhi's ethical principles and the practice of civil disobedience are essential tools in today's climate justice movement.
The National Council for Science and the Environment (NCSE) welcomes you to the 10th National Conference on Science, Policy, and the Environment: The New Green Economy. Marking a decade of history, NCSE's signature national conference will engage leading thinkers and doers from a diversity of disciplines, sectors, and perspectives in a structured conversation about the meaning of the green economy and how investment in green education, research and jobs can help solve both the economic and environmental crises. Welcoming over 1000 attendees, The New Green Economy will bring together leaders in sustainable business, environmental policymakers, civil society, university faculty, students from across the nation, and educated citizens.