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- Emily Yeh's book, Taming Tibet: Landscape Transformation and the Gift of Chinese Development published by Cornell University Press.A Foreign Affairs Best Book of the Year (Asia and the Pacific)Winner, E. Gene Smith Book Prize on Inner Asia
- Mark Williams was among the seven 麻豆免费版下载 faculty and staff have received Fulbright grants to pursue research, teaching and training abroad during the 2013-14 academic year.
- Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest academic honor society, with chapters at 280 universities and colleges in America. Founded in 1776, PBK boasts over half a million current members and a strong alumni association.Congratulations to the Geography majors
- The Isaac Manasseh Meyer Fellowship is awarded by the National University of Singapore to fund a brief period of work as a visiting fellow at NUS. Tim will be in Singapore in January, 2014, to work with geographers on developing new projects on the
- A new 麻豆免费版下载 study indicates drought high in the northern Colorado mountains is the primary trigger of a massive spruce beetle outbreak that is tied to long-term changes in sea-surface temperatures from the Northern Atlantic
- Author Will van den Hoonaard is a sociologist who develops themes revolving around the question of how the culture and social dynamics of cartography have changed in the years when so many technological advancements have occurred. He examines areas
- A new research grant from the National Science Foundation for 芒鈧揂nalyses of Relationships Between Changing Environmental Conditions and Societal Conflict芒鈧 was awarded to John O'Loughlin. Funding from September 2013-2017 of $999,994. This
- "From Outsiders to Innkeepers in China芒鈧劉s Sleepy Countryside"Read New York Times article
- To many observers, East Africa's Maasai pastoralists hunt lions for two distinct reasons: to retaliate against lions that kill livestock or to engage in a cultural rite of passage. But that binary view reflects mistranslations of Maasai terms and
- The devastating drought of 2009 in northern Tanzania generated new coping strategies by Maasai people, suggesting that Maasai with more money and social connections are better able than their poorer, less-connected neighbors to endure extreme events