UK Delegation to Visit Shanghai University to Teach and Collaborate
Fifteen UK faculty members will teach students at Shanghai University in China for a week this summer through the UK Confucius Institute’s “UK Faculty China Short-Term Teaching Program,” during the week of June 16-20.
UK Students Named Fulbright Recipients
Four UK students, including three students in the College of Arts & Sciences, have been selected as recipients of the Fulbright U.S. Student Program scholarships.
Antarctic ice, sea-level, & rivers
The long-speculated collapse of the west Antarctic ice sheet is underway, and also appears to be on an unstoppable trajectory. According to the recently-published research documenting this (Joughin et al., 2014; McMillan et al., 2014; Rignot et al., 2014) it will likely take a couple of centuries for the ice sheets to transfer their water to the sea (in the case of land ice). Among other things, this means that already rising sea levels will accelerate (see this NASA summary discussion on past meltwater pulses and their effects on sea level: http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/gornitz_09/)
New Director of Center for Research on Violence Against Women on 'UK Perspectives'
Diane Follingstad recently spoke on the new Center for Research on Violence Against Women on WUKY's "UK Perspectives."
Adjustedness
Earth surface systems are characterized by components that are adjusted, and those that aren't. By "adjusted," I mean that they have had time to respond to the most recent change or disturbance, and reach relaxation time equilibrium (Phillips, 2009), are considered to be characteristic of their environment. Non-adjusted components are inherited from past environmental conditions, or are inherently dynamically unstable, nonequilibrium phenomena that basically don't reach a stable condition. You could also add a third category--phenomena that are in the process of adjustment, but haven't have time to complete the process (this corresponds roughly to Renwick's (1992) triad of equilibrium, nonequilibrium, and disequilibrium geomorphic systems).
The attached describes a simple method for measuring and quantifying the degree of adjustedness in environmental systems--at least the quantification is simple; determining what constitutes adjusted, adjusting, and non-adjusted could get hairy. This was the seed of what was to be a research proposal, but I doubt that I will ever have time to pursue it. Maybe you will!
Get Your Passport Ready: Jan Fernheimer & Paul Chamberlin Introduce the Year of the Middle East
The University of Kentucky's Passport to the World series is entering its fifth year and with that anniversary comes a number of exciting announcements. This upcoming year the program will highlight an entire region - the Middle East.
Mapping Cyberspace
A research team led by geography professor Matthew Zook is making use of digital data to explore how people, places, and cyberspace interact.
Ghosts of Doctors Past with Melissa Stein
Medical standards and procedures have been sharply influenced by the past - shaped by social context and a great deal of trial and error. A new course, GWS 309: Health, History, & Human Diversity, will focus on how health care and the medical field has been shaped around social constructions of gender, race, and diversity throughout its history, continuing to play a role in contemporary medicine.
Dr. Keiko Tanaka - Food and Sociology
A special lecture by Associate Professor of Sociology Dr. Keiko Tanaka for Rita Basuray's series, Behind What We Eat/Drink.